Carlingford railway line, Sydney

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Carlingford Line
Image:CityRail darkblue.gif
Overview
Mode Commuter rail line
Area
Map colour Dark blue
Owner CityRail
Design
Length 7 km
Stations 7
Connects Clyde
Carlingford
1888 Opened to Camellia
1896 Opened to Carlingford
1900 Reopened under public ownership
1925 Telopea station added
1991 Sandown branch closed and became a freight train line
2003 Parramatta Rail Link (or the Western Sydney Rail Link area cancelled
Operations
Operator(s) CityRail
Fleet L, S sets
Depot(s) Flemington
Public transport |  v  d  e 
Carlingford Railway Line
KBFa
Carlingford
SBRÜCKE
Pennant Hills Rd
BHF
Telopea
SBRÜCKE
Adderton Rd
BRÜCKE
Kissing Point Rd
BHF
Dundas
SBRÜCKE
Victoria Rd
BHF
Rydalmere
WBRÜCKE
Vineyard Creek
WBRÜCKE1
Parramatta River
BHF
Camellia
ABZrg
to Sandown Line
SBRÜCKE
Grand Ave
BHF
Rosehill
SBRÜCKE
James Ruse Dr
WBRÜCKE
A'Beckett Creek
SBRÜCKE
M4 Motorway
WBRÜCKE
Duck Creek
BUE
Parramatta Rd
ABZ3lf
to Clyde on the Western Line


The Carlingford Line is a short railway line on the metropolitan CityRail network located in western Sydney, Australia. It travels between Carlingford and Clyde stations in the Greater Western Sydney and the Hills District. It is labelled as dark blue on CityRail's maps and promotional material.

Contents

[edit] Line description

The Carlingford Line at Dundas
The Carlingford Line at Dundas

The Carlingford Line consists of a double track branch line off the Western Line, between Clyde and Carlingford. The line has its own platform at Clyde station, where it crosses over Parramatta Road on a level crossing, before heading under the M4 Western Motorway to a station opposite Rosehill Gardens Racecourse. Immediately south of Rosehill, the two tracks join, before dividing into two bidirectional tracks- the Sandown Line and the Carlingford line. At Rosehill, two platforms are provided- one four-car long platform on the Carlingford Line track and one platform which is approximately sixteen-cars long on the Sandown line track which is used for special events at Rosehill Gardens Racecourse.

The line then heads in a north-easterly direction over the Parramatta River up to Carlingford. There are no crossing loops or any further sections of double track on the line, and thus no capacity for trains to pass each other. The average 12 minute travel time between Clyde and Carlingford allows a theoretical maximum capacity of approximately two trains per hour on this line. CityRail timetabling and low patronage mean that this is never required. It is Sydney's least-used suburban railway line.

The stations between Carlingford and Camellia consist of a single platform of a sufficient length to accommodate four-car suburban trains (most CityRail services consist of eight cars), due to limited power supply on the line. Prior to 2005, Clyde station was an interchange station of the Western, South and Carlingford lines, although under the September 2005 timetable, South line trains no longer stop at Clyde.

[edit] History

The line was opened in two sections: Clyde to Camellia was opened on 17 November 1888, and Camellia to Carlingford (then known as Pennant Hills) was opened on 20 April 1896.[1] Telopea Station was added in 1925. Originally the line was privately owned by two companies: the line from Clyde to Rosehill was owned by a Mr John Bennett and the line from Rosehill to Carlingford was owned by the Rosehill Railway Company. The lines were taken over by their bank in 1896, with the Government purchasing the line in 1898 and reopening services on 1 August 1900. The line from Clyde to Rosehill was electrified on 12 December 1936. The line from Rosehill to Carlingford was electrified on 9 August 1959. After electrifiction, services were operated by 3 car single deck trains marshalled into Y-Sets, until their final withdrwal in 1993. The line was colour coded orange in CityRail promotional material until 1991 when it was coded yellow (along with the Western Line). In 2000, it was colour coded dark blue[2] in anticipation of its integration into the proposed Parramatta- Chatswood railway line (the Epping- Parramatta portion of which has subsequently been cancelled).[citation needed]

In early 2007 the pedestrian crossings at Telopea and Dundas stations were rebuilt. The new automatic crossings provide audible and visual warnings of an approaching train and a short time later close the metal gates. Over the week of 20 October to 26 October 2007, the section of track from just south of Telopea station to the Carlingford buffer was completely replaced.[3] New concrete sleepers and track replaced what had previously been on timber sleepers. The section of railway from Clyde to Telopea remains laid on timber sleepers.

[edit] Parramatta Rail Link and future plans

The State Government originally planned for the Carlingford line to be part of Stage 2 of the Parramatta Rail Link. The plan would have incorporated the majority of the line, where the line between Carlingford and Camellia would have been duplicated. Telopea, Dundas, and Rydalmere stations would also have been duplicated and upgraded to service eight car trains. Camellia station would have been demolished, Rosehill station closed and replaced by a new underground station named 'Rosehill/Camellia'. Carlingford station would also have been replaced by a new underground station. Various proposals were put forward, including a three-way underground junction near Carlingford linking the station to the proposed North West Rail Link as well as the line to Chatswood.

In 2003 the then Minister for Transport, Mr Michael Costa announced that the line would be truncated to its Stage 1 construction from Chatswood to Epping, and the Carlingford line section indefinitely postponed. Recent plans to extend the North West Rail Link from near Beecroft and build the Harbour Rail Link may probably spell the end of these proposals for the Carlingford line.

Various inquiries and studies have been undertaken since on the future of the Carlingford line. A major problem remains the level crossing on Parramatta Road, which holds up peak hour traffic when trains travel across the road. Proposals have been made including underground tunnel links to Clyde or Granville stations, or even to replace the line altogether with a more frequent light rail or busway service.

Under the 2010 Clearways Plan, the line may have a more certain future thanks to a proposal to build a crossing loop at Rydalmere station and thus increase train frequency to half-hourly throughout the day.

[edit] Services

S49 on a Carlingford shuttle at Clyde
S49 on a Carlingford shuttle at Clyde

Most services operate as a Clyde-Carlingford shuttle. One service in the morning peak hour continues to Central, stopping Lidcombe, Strathfield & Redfern. Another service in the very early morning operates Lidcombe-Carlingford. For all other trains, a change of trains is needed at Clyde station. On racedays at Rosehill racecourse, additional services operate to the Sandown line platform at Rosehill station, and previously stabled on the Sandown branch prior to the removal of the electric cantanery in December 2002.[citation needed] From 12 February 2007, most services were weekdays operated using a four car Millennium train [4], in June 2008 the four car Millennium set was replaced by a three car L set.

Off-Peak Services Per Hour:
Monday to Friday Daytime 1
Monday to Friday Evening 1
Saturday & Sunday Daytime 1
Saturday & Sunday Evening 1


Name of Station Code TravelPass Zone Serving Suburbs Pattern stops
at this station
Connections
Carlingford Line
Clyde CYE Yellow Granville Western Line
Rosehill RSL Yellow Rosehill, Camellia, Harris Park
Camellia CEL Yellow Camellia, Rosehill
Rydalmere RYD Pink Rydalmere
Dundas DDS Pink Dundas, Oatlands
Telopea TEA Pink Telopea, Dundas Valley
Carlingford CGF Pink Carlingford

[edit] References

  1. ^ NSW Railway Passenger Services 1880-1905.. Australian Railway History, April 2005. ARHS NSW Division.
  2. ^ 2000 CityRail map, NSW Rail Historical Timetables
  3. ^ Carlingford line track upgrade. Rail Corporation NSW. Archived from the original on 2007-11-08. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
  4. ^ Railway Digest, April 2007.News in Brief: Millenniums for Carlingford Line ARHS NSW Division
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