Ararat railway station

Ararat

Westbound view from Platform 2 in March 2008
Location Birdwood Avenue, Ararat
Coordinates 37°16′56″S 142°56′12″E / 37.2823°S 142.9367°E / -37.2823; 142.9367Coordinates: 37°16′56″S 142°56′12″E / 37.2823°S 142.9367°E / -37.2823; 142.9367
Owned by VicTrack
Operated by V/Line
Line(s) Serviceton
Western standard gauge
Distance 210.82 kilometres from Southern Cross
Platforms 2 (1 side, 1 dock)
Tracks 2
Construction
Structure type Ground
Other information
Status Staffed
Station code ART
Fare zone Myki zone 17
Website Public Transport Victoria
History
Opened 7 April 1875
Services
Preceding station   V/Line   Following station
Serviceton lineTerminus
Preceding station   Great Southern Railway   Following station
towards Melbourne
The Overland
towards Adelaide

Ararat railway station is located on the Serviceton and Western standard gauge lines in Victoria, Australia. It serves the town of Ararat.[1] It is also the junction for the closed Ararat – Maryborough line.

Facilities

Ararat has two platform faces. The full length standard gauge platform is to the north, with broad gauge trains using a dock platform on the south face. A grade crossing exists at the eastern end of the station, to allow the broad gauge to continue east towards Beaufort and Ballarat, while the standard gauge heads south towards Geelong.

Control of signals is by the Australian Rail Track Corporation control centre at Mile End, South Australia, and Centrol, in Melbourne.[1]

A dead end siding is located to the east, for broad gauge passenger trains, and across from the main platform are two loops and one dead end standard gauge sidings.[2]

History

The railway first reached Ararat from Ballarat on 7 April 1875. The line south to Portland opened in December 1877, and the mainline was extended west, reaching the South Australian border, at Serviceton, in January 1887. The line to Maryborough opened in 1890.[3] Two signal boxes ('A' and 'B') opened in 1891, and in 1914, the goods sidings were extended, with the locomotive depot built soon after.[3]

In the late 1930s, the locomotive depot was expanded, in conjunction with the arrival of the new H class 4-8-4 steam locomotives, intended for use on The Overland passenger train. An 85 feet (26 m) turntable was installed with 24 roads around it, the largest on the Victorian Railways network. Before this time, Stawell was the major servicing facility in the region.[4]

During 1985, the passenger facilities in the main station building were refurbished.[5] However, during this time, rationalisation of the facilities began; the "B" box was demolished in 1984, and the train control office followed in 1988. The former footbridge, which was located at the Up end of the station, was destroyed by a derailment in May 1986.[6] The locomotive depot closed in 1989, with "A" box following in 1996. Gauge conversion also came to the station in the 1990s, with the main line to Adelaide converted to standard gauge, as part of the One Nation project. The lines west and south were converted, with the line to Maryborough converted to dual gauge soon after.

The former main line to Ballarat had services suspended in April 1995, and was left as broad gauge.[1] V/Line passenger services westward to Dimboola had earlier been withdrawn on 21 August 1993, with the Ballarat to Ararat service withdrawn on 27 May 1994.[7]

On 11 July 2004, the line to Ballarat was reopened, with V/Line passenger services reinstated.[8][9] The contract for the works were awarded in February 2003,[10] and required a diamond crossing and signalling to be installed, to allow the broad gauge line to reach the platform. The Maryborough line was booked out of use in January 2005.[1]

Platforms & services

Ararat has two platforms. It is serviced by V/Line Ararat line services and Great Southern Rail Overland services.[11][12]

Platform 1:

Platform 2:

Transport Links

V/Line operate road coach services from Ararat to Ballarat, Warrnambool and Nhill.[13][14][15]

Ararat Transit operates bus services from the station.[16]

Gallery

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ararat Vicsig
  2. ARTC system maps: Victoria Western Line Australian Rail Track Corporation
  3. 1 2 The Ararat Story Royal Historical Society of Victoria
  4. Lee, Robert (2007). The Railways of Victoria 1854–2004. Melbourne University Publishing. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-522-85134-2.
  5. "Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. May 1985. p. 147.
  6. "Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. August 1986. p. 249.
  7. Chris Banger (March 1997). "Rail Passenger Service Withdrawals Since 1960". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. pp. 77–82.
  8. "Action-Packed Day to Welcome Trains Back to Ararat". Media Release: Minister for Public Transport. www.legislation.vic.gov.au. 5 July 2004.
  9. Ararat sleepers awake to new sound—the train The Age 10 July 2004
  10. "$20 Million Contract Signed to Re-open Ararat & Bairnsdale Rail Lines". Media Release: Minister for Public Transport. www.legislation.vic.gov.au. 3 February 2003.
  11. Ararat–Melbourne Public Transport Victoria
  12. Timetables Great Southern Rail
  13. Ararat–Ballarat Public Transport Victoria
  14. Warrnambool–Ararat Public Transport Victoria
  15. Nhill–Ararat Public Transport Victoria
  16. "Ararat transit launched". Ararat Advertiser. yourguide.com.au. 2008-05-13. Archived from the original on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-01.
Closed station navigation
Ararat–Maryborough line
| Ben Nevis railway station Next station

External links

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