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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Renewal  







2 Route  



2.1  Line guide  







3 Services  





4 Gallery  





5 References  





6 External links  














Grange line







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Grange railway line)

Grange line
Grange Railway Station
Overview
LocaleAdelaide, South Australia
Termini
  • Grange
  • Stations11
    Service
    TypeCommuter rail
    Operator(s)Adelaide Metro
    Rolling stock3000/3100 class
    History
    OpenedSeptember 1882
    Re-sleepered
    (concrete)
    2010
    Technical
    Line length13.0 km (8.1 mi)
    Number of tracks
  • 1 (to Grange)
  • Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)

    Route map

    km

    1894–1957

    13.2
    Grange (original site)
    1882–1986

    Military Road

    13.0
    Grange Buses in Adelaide

    Charles Sturt Avenue

    12.0
    East Grange

    Frederick Street

    Golf Links
    closed 1961

    10.3
    Seaton Park

    Todville Street

    10.2
    Hendon
    closed 1980

    9.1
    Albert Park Buses in Adelaide

    7.8
    Holdens
    closed 1992

    7.5
    Woodville Buses in Adelaide

    Woodville Road

    6.8
    Woodville Park

    Kilkenny Road/David Terrace

    6.0
    Kilkenny

    Private road

    5.1
    West Croydon
    over Rosetta street

    4.2
    Croydon

    Queen Street/Elizabeth Street

    Coglin Street

    Chief Street

    East Street

    2.7
    Bowden (original site)
    1856–2017

    Gibson Street

    2.4
    Bowden

    1.7
    Torrens Bridge
    closed 1888

    Adelaide Depot
    closed 2011

    0.0
    Adelaide Trams in Adelaide Buses in Adelaide
    km

  • talk
  • edit
  • The Grange line is a suburban branch line in Adelaide, South Australia.

    History[edit]

    In September 1882, a line was opened from Woodville to Grange, built by the Grange Railway and Investment Company. Unlike the Adelaide to Port Adelaide route, which was built and operated by the South Australian Government, the Grange line was a private venture, constructed to tap into potential development in the area between Woodville and the coast. The new line ran into a bay platform at Woodville. Although there was a connection to the main line, it was not possible for Grange line trains to conveniently continue to Adelaide.

    The Grange railway company, with its rolling stock of two locomotives and four carriages, was not a financial success and was forced to operate on a shoestring budget right from the start. Following its collapse, the South Australian Railways took over operation in 1891, using a steam tram in place of the more conventional locomotive and carriages. The Grange line was fully bought out by the State Government in 1893,[1][page needed] and in 1894 it was extended as the Henley Beach railway line from Grange southwards to Henley Beach along Military Road. Following modifications to the track layout at Woodville station in 1909, it became possible for trains from the Henley Beach and Grange branch lines to travel beyond Woodville to Adelaide.[1][page needed]

    In November 1940, a stationatHendon was opened; the line to the station diverged from the Grange line at Albert Park and ran 1.1 kilometres (0.68 mi) to the Hendon munitions works. After the end of World War II, the Hendon trains operated only at shift-change times. In spite of low passenger numbers, the service continued operation until 1 February 1980, after which the station was closed and the rail corridor repurposed as the eastern end of West Lakes Boulevard.[1][page needed] The Grange line also serviced the former Cheltenham Racecourse station for Saturday horse racing events up until the 1960s.

    The terminus at Grange was relocated in the late 1980s on the eastern side of Military Road to eliminate a level crossing. The old station was formerly a stop on the Henley Beach line, an extension of the Grange line which closed in 1957. A station named Holdens, located between Woodville and Albert Park stations adjacent to what is now the SA Manufacturing Park, was closed in 1992 and subsequently demolished. Until 1996, Grange line services previously operated as a shuttle from Woodville station at night and on weekends, connecting with Outer Harbor line services.

    Renewal[edit]

    The South Australian Government is considering electrifying the Outer Harbor line or converting it to light rail. A light rail conversion would also require the conversion or closure of the Grange line. A 2016 report into potential light rail projects in Adelaide considered four options for the future of the Grange line. The first option would electrify the heavy rail line but make no other changes, the second would convert the line to light rail and add a new on-street branch from Albert Park station to West Lakes, the third would retain the West Lakes route but replace the remaining section of the railway line with light rail along Grange Road and the final option would see the West Lakes line branch from the Grange Road light rail - completely replacing the railway line.[2]

    During 2–23 January 2017, the line was closed with the Outer Harbor line for the building of an overpass over South Road. During this time, tracks between Woodville station and Port Road were replaced, and Albert Park station was rebuilt.[3][failed verification] Both lines were closed again along with a portion of the Gawler line in April, June, July, and August of the same year to work on the Torrens Rail Junction Project;[4][5][6][7] The entire line closed on September 24, and reopened on January 15, 2018.[8]

    Route[edit]

    The line runs from the Adelaide to the seaside suburb of Grange. The route follows the same alignment as the Outer Harbor and Port Dock lines as far as Woodville station, where it diverges south west and across Port Road. The route then travels through Albert Park and bisects the Royal Adelaide Golf Club between Seaton Park and East Grange stations. The line is single track from Woodville to Grange with no passing loops over its entire length. All stations on the line are unattended and have only very basic passenger waiting facilities. The line is 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) long and uses the 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) broad gauge.

    Line guide[edit]

    Grange Line
    Name Distance from
    Adelaide
    Year opened Serving suburbs Connections
    Adelaide 0.0 km 1856 Adelaide Belair Flinders Gawler
    Seaford

    Buses in Adelaide Bus Trams in Adelaide Tram

    Bowden 2.4 km 1856 Bowden
    Croydon 4.2 km 1888 Croydon
    West Croydon 5.1 km 1915 West Croydon
    Kilkenny 6.0 km 1881 Kilkenny, Woodville Park
    Woodville Park 6.8 km 1936 Woodville, Woodville Park
    Woodville 7.5 km 1856 St Clair, Woodville Outer Harbor Port Dock

    Buses in Adelaide Bus

    Albert Park 9.1 km 1882 Albert Park, Woodville West Buses in Adelaide Bus
    Seaton Park 10.3 km 1882 Seaton
    East Grange 12.0 km 1882 Grange
    Grange 12.0 km 1882 Grange Buses in Adelaide Bus

    Services[edit]

    Services operate in tandem with Outer Harbor line trains. Weekday off-peak services run every 30 minutes, Weekday peak services run every 20–30 minutes with hourly services on weekends.[9] When Royal Adelaide Golf Club hosted the South Australian Open services were temporarily cut back to Seaton Park for approximately two weeks. Rail replacement buses were used to transport passengers for the remainder of the route. The tournaments were cancelled in 2007. All services are operated by 3000 class railcars since 2014.

    Gallery[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b c Thompson, M. (1988). Rails Through Swamp and Sand – A History of the Port Adelaide Railway. Port Dock Station Railway Museum. ISBN 0-9595073-6-1.
  • ^ "AdeLINK Multi-Criteria Analysis Summary Report" (PDF). Department of Transport, Planning and Infrastructure. 2016. pp. 11–13. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 November 2016. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  • ^ Malinauskas, Peter (2 January 2017). "Major works kick off to remove one of Adelaide's worst level crossings". Premier of South Australia. Archived from the original on 13 January 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  • ^ "Outer Harbor, Grange and Gawler rail line closures". Adelaide Metro. Archived from the original on 12 April 2017.
  • ^ "Outer Harbor, Grange and Gawler train lines temporary closures June long weekend". Adelaide Metro. Archived from the original on 6 June 2017.
  • ^ "Outer Harbor, Grange and Gawler line July closure". Adelaide Metro. Archived from the original on 7 July 2017.
  • ^ "Outer Harbor, Grange and Gawler rail line closures August 2017". Adelaide Metro. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017.
  • ^ Kemp, Miles (13 September 2017). "Major disruption to Outer Harbor and Gawler train lines as work starts on Park Tce underpass". news.com.au. Archived from the original on 13 September 2017. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  • ^ "Outer Harbor & Grange timetable" (PDF). Adelaide Metro. 23 February 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 January 2015.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grange_line&oldid=1232382513"

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