Wondabyne railway station, New South Wales

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Wondabyne
Newcastle & Central Coast Line
Station code WDB
Town Wondabyne
Street(s) No road access[1]
Distance from Central Station 65.15 km
Altitude (above sea level) 0 m
Types of stopping trains Intercity
Number of platforms 2
Number of tracks 2
Platform arrangement 2 Side
Type of station Ground
Ticket barriers No
Transfers available None
Disabled access Handicapped/disabled access No
Station facilities Link

Wondabyne railway station is a railway station on the Newcastle and Central Coast Line in the CityRail network in New South Wales, Australia. The station is noted for its remoteness and having an extraordinarily short platform, which is less than a train carriage long.[citation needed] It is the only railway station in Australia which has no road access.[1]

The station is an optional stop, and any passenger wishing to alight at the station must inform the guard of their intention to do so, and then travel in the last carriage of the train and exit through the rear door only.[2][3] When a passenger wishes to board a train at Wondabyne, they must flag the driver. The platform on the Mullet Creek side connects to a public pontoon. Six kilometres southwards downstream, Mullet Creek flows into the Hawkesbury River.[2]

Contents

[edit] Platforms/Service

Platform 1:

Platform 2:

[edit] Bushwalking tracks

Mullet Creek scenery near Wondabyne
Mullet Creek scenery near Wondabyne

At the south end of the platform on the escarpment side is a track that climbs to the edge of the plateau above. At the edge a well formed fire trail continues on to Mount Kariong and then the Gosford suburb of Kariong. There is a bus service from Kariong to Gosford.

Fifteen minutes along the trail from the edge of the escarpment, on the south side, a track commences that ends at the well known geological formation, Pindar Cave.[4]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Marie Andrews, MP (1996-05-01). Pawnbrokers And Second-Hand Dealers Bill - Second Reading. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  2. ^ a b Jason Hughes. Bushwalking around Sydney: Wondabyne to Pindar Cave. Paddy Pallin. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  3. ^ Peter Monks. Wondabyne Mainline. A Rockclimber's Guide to Sydney. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  4. ^ Tom Brennan. Pindar Cave. Bushwalking NSW. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.

[edit] External links

Preceding Station
(inbound)
Line Following Station
(outbound)
Hawkesbury River
Newcastle & Central Coast Line
Woy Woy
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