
As one of the most prominent engineers in post-war Japan, he has also been awarded numerous international prizes and honors, including the Elmer A. Hideo Shima was honored by the Government of Japan when the Emperor presented him with the Order of Cultural Merit. In 1969, Shima began a second career, becoming the head of the National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA), where he pushed the development of hydrogen engines to power rockets. The building of the first line, which needed 3,000 bridges and 67 tunnels to allow a clear and largely straight path, led to such huge cost overruns that he resigned in 1963, along with the president, Shinji Sogō, who had backed Shima's ideas, even though the line proved to be popular and well-used. The cost of the first Shinkansen line also cost Shima his job. Shima's team designed the sleek cone-shaped front from which the bullet train got its name. In addition to its innovative propulsion system, the Shinkansen also introduced features like air suspension and air-conditioning. One of the original 0 Series Shinkansen trains He worked briefly for Sumitomo Metal Industries, but was asked by Shinji Sogō, the president of JNR, to come back and oversee the building of the first Shinkansen line, in 1955. But, after the establishment of Japanese National Railways in 1949, a train fire at a station in Yokohama that killed more than 100 people in 1951 led him to resign in the Japanese tradition of taking responsibility. Īs Shima's career progressed, he became the head of the national railway's rolling stock department in 1948. It was during these years that he came up with an innovation that would later be employed in the bullet trains-the use of trains driven by electric motors in the individual rail cars, rather than by an engine at the front ("distributed-power multiple-unit control systems"). Shima was also involved in the design and development of the Class C62 and Class D62 steam locomotives for express passenger trains and heavy-duty freight trains, respectively. JGR used the opportunity to obtain permission from SCAP to modify all wooden passenger cars (approximately 3,000 were in use then) to a steel construction within a few years. The Hachikō Line derailment in 1947 was a turning point in his career. This experience helped in the rapid growth of the Japanese automobile industry after the war.


Shima also participated in the design and fabrication of a standard heavy duty truck which was mass-produced by Isuzu when World War II broke out. Using new techniques to balance the driving wheels and new valve gear designs, he helped design Japan's first 3-cylinder locomotive - the Class C53, which was based on the Class C52 imported from the United States. Hideo Shima joined the Ministry of Railways ( Japanese Government Railways) in 1925, where, as a rolling-stock engineer, he designed steam locomotives.
