Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route

The Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route (立山黒部アルペンルート Tateyama Kurobe Arupen Rūto) is a sightseeing route between Tateyama, Toyama and Ōmachi, Nagano, Japan.

Understand


In order to build the Kurobe Dam, opened in 1963 and at 186 meters still the tallest in Japan, a tunnel 5.4 km long was dug under Mount Tate (Tateyama). Sensing an opportunity, the Tateyama Kurobe Kankō (TKK) company was set up to turn this into a tourist attraction, stringing together a series of cable cars, aerial lifts and buses into a 37-km path across and through the mountains.

Tourist information site
The route has an official multilingual site.

Climate
Due to the high altitude (over 2,400 m at Murodō), it's cold up top: April lows are below freezing and even in midsummer you'll be lucky if the mercury cracks 15°C. It's also just high enough to potentially trigger altitude sickness, although this is unlikely to manifest as anything more severe than a headache and feeling out of breath easily.

Get in
The main cities near the termini are Toyama to the west and Matsumoto to the east. By train, Toyama can be reached from Tokyo in about two hours on the Hokuriku Shinkansen, while Matsumoto is about 2½ hours from Tokyo on the Super Azusa express. From Osaka, Toyama can be reached on the direct Thunderbird express (3½ hours), while Matsumoto can be reached after changing trains in Nagoya (total 4 hours).

Driving across the Alpine Route is not permitted. Tateyama Traffic can deliver your car to the other end, but they have to do it the long way around (~200 km) and this costs a stiff &yen;26,000.

Get around
As private transportation is neither permitted nor possible, the only ways to cross from Tateyama to Ōgisawa are the official TKK route, or a lengthy and demanding multi-day trek. Open from mid-April to November (the exact dates vary yearly based on snow conditions), the official route consists of:

All modes of transport run every 20-40 minutes, roughly 07:00-17:00. However, at peak times, notably the April-May snow season and in particular during the Golden Week holidays (April 29-May 5), waiting times of over an hour are not uncommon.

Tickets are sold based on the number of stages traveled, and once purchased are valid for up to five days. As an indication, Toyama to Murodō is ¥3,630 one-way, while the full whack from Toyama to Shinano-Omachi is a steep ¥9,140 one-way.

Due to the amount of walking involved and the number of transfers, carting about heavy bags is not recommended, but fortunately all accommodations on route will be happy to arrange next-day takkyubin pick up and delivery at around ¥2000 to/from Tokyo/Osaka for a suitcase under 25 kg.

See






Do
There are plenty of hiking opportunities in the summer and fall, including an ascent of Mount Tate itself.

Sleep
There are several hotels along the route itself, but these are all 1970s-era concrete behemoths and they're pricy due to the complicated logistics needed to supply them. Most visitors opt to day-trip or stay in the towns at either end.



Go next

 * Mount Tate