The is a Kyoto City Subway line which runs from the southeastern area of the city (starting from Rokujizà  Station), then east to west (i.e. tà Âzai in Japanese) through the Kyoto downtown area. The Kyoto Municipal Transportation Bureau operates the system along with the Karasuma Line and the City Bus. The present terminal stations are Rokujizo Station in Uji and Uzumasa Tenjingawa Station in Ukyà Â-ku, Kyoto. It handles an average of 241,133 passengers daily (2009 data).
The stations are wheelchair-friendly, with elevators, narrow gaps between platform and train, and no height differences at places like restrooms. Each station has a colour code for easy recognition. All platforms on the line are island platforms, and have platform screen doors separating the platform from the tracks.
The line is long with a track gauge of . The entire length is double-track. Trains are electric, operating on 1,500 V DC. Trains travel between Rokujizà  and Uzumasa Tenjingawa in 34 minutes.
On October 12, 1997, the section the line from Daigo to Nijà  opened. On November 26, 2004, the line from Daigo to Rokujizà  opened. An extension westward from Nijà  to Uzumasa Tenjingawa began service on January 16, 2008.
Kyoto City Subway trains are based at Daigo Depot, while Keihan Electric Railway trains are based at Nishigà Âri Depot located on the Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line.
After World War II, the Kyoto Municipal Transportation Bureau discussed the possibility of creating a new municipal streetcar system, connecting Rokujizà Â, Daigo, and Keage, before cutting along the centre of Oike-dà Âri (an elevated line was also considered). Before long, the proposal was at an impasse in the face of ever-increasing automobile use in the city. However, the plan was eventually reworked as a subway line.
The population along the east-west route showed a considerable trend of growth, but road development in the vicinity could not overcome traffic congestion, so a plan for transportation facilities connecting the eastern part of the city (Yamashina-ku and the eastern portion of Fushimi-ku) with the city center was developed starting in 1965, and it was officially approved by the city government in 1969. The construction of the segment from Daigo to Nijà  was set to start in 1975.
At that time, however, the Keihan Keishin Line ran above-ground between Misasagi and Sanjo Keihan along the planned route, and the issue of competition arose. As a result of negotiations, Kyoto City and Keihan Electric Railway agreed to establish a Third Sector (public-private partnership) company to obtain a Type-3 railroad business permit and control the tracks, while the City of Kyoto would obtain a Type-2 railroad business permit and operate the trains on that section. Thus the Kyoto Rapid Railway Corporation was born. Founded in 1986, then-mayor Masahiko Imagawa assumed duties as its president. Kyoto Rapid Railway constructed the subway through the Japan Railway Construction Group, and along with the Keihan Keishin Line's incorporation, the above-ground section was set to be eliminated.
Over the course of construction work underneath Kyoto, the project faced frequent, unavoidable interruptions due to discoveries of remains and ruins, and experienced difficult work in tunneling underneath the Kamo River and Tà Âkaidà  Shinkansen. The section from Daigo to Nijà  opened in 1997, and the Keihan Keishin Line was integrated from Misasagi to Kyoto Shiyakusho-mae.
The reason that the Keishin Line does not terminate at Sanjo Keihan as it originally did when above-ground, is that the necessary amount of space for a returning track could not be provided (not only is there a sharp curve directly to the west of that station, but the extra dead-end track would be directly underneath the Kamo River, so it was not feasible). The reason it did not originally continue to the (then-)terminus at Nijà  was for the Kyoto Municipal Transportation Bureau to keep the calculated costs of running the trains balanced. However, since the opening of the extension in 2008, this is no longer the case and trains of the Keishin line now continue to the present terminus at Uzumasa Tenjingawa.
When the above-ground Keishin Line portion was demolished, Kujà Âyama Station and Hinooka Station (which have no subway counterparts) were demolished as well. City residents who lived near Kujà Âyama Station demanded that there be a Kujà Âyama subway station, but due to anticipated difficulties in construction (local topography would have either made a station on the subway line as it stands extremely deep or required steep grades on either side), as well as an insufficient estimated number of riders, this request went unfulfilled.
A plan exists to extend the Tà Âzai Line as far west as Rakusai in Nishikyà Â-ku, but for the time being, the extension will be stopped at Uzumasa Tenjingawa; prospects beyond that are as-yet still unclear. There are several issues to be considered: