Bankstown railway line

This article is about the physical railway line. For the Sydney Trains service that operates on the line, see Bankstown Line.
Bankstown railway line

View of the Bankstown railway line as it runs through Dulwich Hill in 2010. The former Rozelle branch of the Metropolitan Goods railway can be seen on the right; it has since been converted to light rail.
Overview
Termini Sydenham
Regents Park
Stations 12
Operation
Opened 1 February 1895
Owner RailCorp
Operator(s) Sydney Trains
Events
opened to Belmore 1 February 1895
exended to Bankstown 14 April 1909
extended to Regents Park 16 July 1928
Technical
Line length 17
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)

The Bankstown railway line is a railway line serves the Canterbury-Bankstown and Inner West regions of Sydney between the stations of Sydenham and Regents Park.

History

The line opened on 1 February 1895, branching from the Illawarra line from Sydenham to Belmore.[1] The line was originally constructed as an alternative route for goods traffic on the main southern railway, with planners intending the line to eventually link up with the main line at Liverpool.[2] The 1890s depression put this plan on hold; by the time funds became available again, it had been decided to make the Bankstown line a suburban-only line to service the growing population west of Canterbury.

On 14 April 1909, the line was extended to Bankstown, with intermediate stations at Lakemba and Punchbowl. In 1916, the Metropolitan Goods Line was constructed, running parallel to Bankstown line from Marrickville to Campsie. On 16 July 1928, it was extended to Regents Park where it joined the Main South line via a triangular junction.[3][4]

In 1926, the line between Sydenham and Bankstown became the second line in Sydney to be electrified which also saw Punchbowl Maintenance Depot built. Electrification was extended from Bankstown to Regents Park in 1939.[5] A new station between Lakemba and Punchbowl at Wiley Park opened on 19 June 1938. Punchbowl Maintenance Depot closed in 1994.[6]

In January 2006 a four-year project to upgrade the line was completed. The work included the re-sleepering of the entire line, replacing the former wooden sleepers with the more durable concrete ones, replacement and upgrade of the signalling, and also replacement of the ageing catenary, mostly with the more modern double contact wire variety. The lengthy upgrade process was noted for its "January Closedowns", in which the entire line was closed in January for the bulk of the upgrade work to take place.[7]

Services

Electric passenger services operated along the Bankstown Line to Wynyard station until the 1956 opening of Circular Quay station and the completion of the City Circle. In 1979 with the opening of the Eastern Suburbs line the direction around the City Circle reversed with trips from Bankstown going to St James first and vice versa.

All services operated as a loop, continuing from Lidcombe to the City via the Main Suburban line, until the early 2000s. At this point, this was changed with alternate services routed to terminate at Liverpool.

A new timetable released in October 2013 broke the loop between the two lines. As part of the Rail Clearways Program, new turnbacks were constructed at Lidcombe and Homebush to allow the separation of both lines and increase their reliability and frequency. Services were also changed to operate mostly around the City Circle via Town Hall on weekdays (rather than via Museum).

The line was depicted in a brown colour in the early 1990s[8] before being changed to a purple colour around 2000,[9] before it became the current orange colour.

Sydney Metro Rapid Transit

As part of the Sydney Metro Rapid Transit project, the line from Sydenham to Bankstown will be converted by 2024 from its current high capacity double deck commuter rail configuration to a rapid transit line. Using Alstom Metropolis rolling stock,[10] the line is expected to see higher frequency service with fewer seats per train.[11] Consultants have identified the curved steam train-era station platforms on the line as a challenge in its conversion, as straighter platforms are required for the operation of driver-less, high-frequency metro services.[12]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.