Punchbowl maintenance depot, Sydney
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Punchbowl Maintenance Depot is a former CityRail train depot in the south-western Sydney suburb of Punchbowl, New South Wales, Australia.
The depot opened in 1923 and was one of four electric train depots built under the Bradfield electrification plan, the other depots being at Mortdale, Flemington and Hornsby.[1] Punchbowl was the first electric train depot to have a carriage washing plant installed in 1959. A newer enclosed washing plant replaced the original one in 1986 and similar plants were also built at Mortdale, Flemington and Hornsby. The depot formerly stabled and maintained trains used on the Bankstown and East Hills lines.
By the early 1990's Punchbowl was considered "in the middle of nowhere" due to the expansion of Sydney's population to the west and south-west and Punchbowl was no longer near the terminus of the lines it served, adding to operational difficulties and inconvenience. Punchbowl Maintenance Centre closed in February 1994 after the last single-deck carriages were withdrawn in November 1993. Responsibility for its Tangara trains was transferred to Mortdale, and responsibility for other double-deck cars was transferred to Flemington. The site lay closed and derelict for several years, before being demolished. The former area is now known as The Waterford Estate while a park called "Sidings Park" has been established in the middle of the estate as an interpretation of the site's previous use.
[edit] See also
- Railways in Sydney
- CityRail
- Mortdale maintenance depot
- Flemington maintenance depot
- Hornsby maintenance depot
[edit] References
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008) |