Western Line | |
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Mode | Commuter rail line |
Owner | CityRail |
Operator(s) | CityRail |
Connects | Central Strathfield Blacktown Penrith Parramatta Richmond |
Stations | 34 |
Fleet | R, S, K, T, G & H sets |
Depot(s) | Hornsby |
Line colour | Yellow |
Key dates | |
1855 | Opened |
The Western Line is part of the CityRail metropolitan rail network in Sydney, and is the suburban section of the Main West line which connects Sydney with the west of New South Wales. It connects the Sydney CBD to the employment centre of Parramatta and the outer western suburbs, terminating at Emu Plains at the foot of the Blue Mountains. The line physically continues over the mountains but this is known as the Blue Mountains Line. Passengers are able to travel beyond this into western New South Wales via CountryLink as well as interstate to Adelaide, South Australia and Perth, Western Australia with the Indian Pacific. A north-westerly branch also operates to Richmond. Western Line trains are usually fed by the North Shore Line.
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The Western Line opened to Penrith in 1863 as a double track branch from the junction with the Main South line at Granville.[1] Electrification reached Parramatta in 1928 and Penrith in 1955.[2] In 1980, quadruplication of the track between Blacktown and St Marys was completed.[3]
The branch line from Blacktown to Windsor, Richmond and the Hawkesbury River opened in 1864 (known locally as the Richmond Line). In 1926, an extension was opened to Kurrajong, closing in 1952.[4] The line was electrified to Riverstone in 1975.[2] Electrifiction from Riverstone to Richmond commenced in 1987 but was suspended in 1988 due to lack of funds, restarting in 1990 and opening in August 1991.[5] Initially electric trains operated as 2-car shuttles between Riverstone to Richmond until the electric power supply was upgraded to allow through running to and from Sydney in 1992. As part of the Clearways Project, there are currently plans to duplicate the track between Quakers Hill and Schofields to expand capacity. On 20 November 2006, Railcorp announced plans to extend duplication further along the line to Vineyard station.[6] There are also long term plans to link the proposed North Western railway line to join the Richmond line at Vineyard.
First introduced in 2004 by a consortium of Dutch bank ABN AMRO and developer Leighton Holdings, the project dubbed the Penrith High Speed Link, known officially as Western FastRail, was reproposed in December 2006 and received approving comments by the NSW State Government, and was offered funding by Federal Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd should the Australian Labor Party win the 2007 Federal Election.[7]
The $2 billion Western FastRail project will involve a tunnel being built between Parramatta and the Sydney CBD. It will shrink times from Penrith to the city to 28 minutes (presently over 55 minutes), Parramatta to City to 11 minutes (presently over 30 minutes) and Blacktown to City to 17 minutes (presently over 40 minutes). The plan would assist the entire Western Suburbs of Sydney (40% of Sydney's population), which as an area, is accursed with longer commute times than any other part of Sydney. It would also reduce the car dependency that is characteristic of this region.
The Western FastRail project was rejected twice after government advisers estimated the project would cost $4.5 billion: $2 billion more than the proponents claimed. It was not clear where $600 million worth of single-deck rolling stock would come from; Penrith commuters would have to pay an extra $40 a week, and those who could not afford such a steep tariff would have to travel 84 minutes to the city for work due to the services cut to free tracks for the fast trains. Central, Parramatta and Wynyard would all need multimillion-dollar upgrades. Commuter car parks and feeder services would be needed. And none of these central concerns had been modelled or costed; a senior member of the Government's appraisal team said: "The construction cost estimates were entirely fanciful at $2 [billion] to $2.5 billion. That is just bollocks". Michael Easson, a former NSW Union Leader who had since become a prominent developer was central to the project and its strongest promoter. Concerns were raised that Easson would use inside knowledge to buy up adjacement property in Parramatta and Penrith, realising considerable profits through his companies EG Property Group and EG Property Consulting. Easson has however consistently denied these allegations. [8]
Name of Station | Code[9] | Distance from Central Station |
Date of Opening | MyMulti Zone[10] |
Serving Suburbs | Pattern stops at this station | Connections | ||||||||
suburban through service originates from ■North Shore Line | |||||||||||||||
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Western Line | |||||||||||||||
Central | CEN | 0 km | 28 February 1932 | MyMulti1 | Central, Strawberry Hills Ultimo, Surry Hills |
■Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra Line ■Bankstown Line ■Airport & East Hills Line ■South Line ■Inner West Line ■Northern Line ■North Shore Line ■South Coast Line ■Blue Mountains Line ■Newcastle & Central Coast Line ■Southern Highlands Line* *limited services only |
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Redfern | RED | 1.3 km | 15 April 1878 | MyMulti1 | Redfern, Waterloo, Darlington The University of Sydney |
■Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra Line ■Bankstown Line ■South Line ■Airport & East Hills Line* ■Northern Line ■Inner West Line ■South Coast Line* ■Blue Mountains Line* ■Newcastle & Central Coast Line* *peak hours only |
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Burwood | BUW | 10.6 km | 26 September 1855 | MyMulti2 | Burwood, Strathfield | ■Northern Line ■South Line ■Inner West Line |
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Strathfield | SFD | 11.8 km | 9 July 1876 | MyMulti2 | Strathfield, Homebush | ■Northern Line ■South Line ■Inner West Line ■Newcastle & Central Coast Line ■Blue Mountains Line |
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Lidcombe | LDC | 16.6 km | 1 November 1858 | MyMulti2 | Lidcombe | ■Inner West Line ■South Line ■Bankstown Line ■Olympic Park Line ■Blue Mountains Line* *limited services only |
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Auburn | AUB | 18.7 km | 1877 | MyMulti2 | Auburn | ||||||||||
Clyde | CLJ | 20.6 km | 1882 | MyMulti2 | Clyde, Granville | ||||||||||
Granville | GRN | 21.4 km | 2 July 1860 | MyMulti2 | Granville | ■South Line ■Blue Mountains Line* *limited services only |
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Harris Park | HPK | 22.6 km | After 1883 | MyMulti2 | Harris Park | ||||||||||
Parramatta | PTA | 23.2 km | 4 July 1860 | MyMulti2 | Parramatta | ■Cumberland Line ■Blue Mountains Line |
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Westmead | WMD | 25.1 km | March 1883 | MyMulti2 | Westmead | ■Cumberland Line ■Blue Mountains Line |
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Wentworthville | WWV | 26.7 km | 1883 | MyMulti2 | Wentworthville | ||||||||||
Pendle Hill | PDH | 28.3 km | 12 April 1924 | MyMulti2 | Pendle Hill | ||||||||||
Toongabbie | TBB | 29.9 km | 26 April 1880 | MyMulti2 | Toongabbie | ||||||||||
Seven Hills | SEV | 32.1 km | 1 December 1863 | MyMulti2 | Seven Hills | ||||||||||
Blacktown | BAK | 34.8 km | 4 July 1860 | MyMulti3 | Blacktown | ■Cumberland Line ■Blue Mountains Line |
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At Blacktown the line branches. The north western branch is towards Richmond, and the western branch is towards Emu Plains. | |||||||||||||||
To Emu Plains | |||||||||||||||
Doonside | DOD | 38.6 km | 27 September 1880 | MyMulti3 | Doonside | ||||||||||
Rooty Hill | RYH | 40.9 km | 23 December 1861 | MyMulti3 | Rooty Hill | ||||||||||
Mount Druitt | MTT | 43.3 km | 19 August 1881 | MyMulti3 | Mount Druitt | ||||||||||
St Marys | STM | 47.4 km | 1 May 1862 | MyMulti3 | St Marys, Dunheved | ||||||||||
End of 4 tracks at St Marys. | |||||||||||||||
Werrington | WRT | 49.1 km | 2 May 1868 | MyMulti3 | Werrington | ||||||||||
Kingswood | KWD | 52.7 km | 1 September 1887 | MyMulti3 | Kingswood | ||||||||||
Penrith | PEN | 55.1 km | 19 January 1863 | MyMulti3 | Penrith | ■Blue Mountains Line | |||||||||
Emu Plains | EPS | 57.4 km | 18 August 1868 | MyMulti3 | Emu Plains, Emu Heights | ■Blue Mountains Line | |||||||||
Suburban services stop here. Intercity services to Katoomba and onward continue on Blue Mountains line. | |||||||||||||||
To Richmond | |||||||||||||||
Marayong | MYG | 37.4 km | 2 October 1922 | MyMulti3 | Marayong | ||||||||||
Quakers Hill | QKH | 40.1 km | 1872 | MyMulti3 | Quakers Hill | ||||||||||
Schofields | SFS | 43.8 km | 1870 | MyMulti3 | Schofields | ||||||||||
Riverstone | RVS | 46.0 km | 1 December 1864 | MyMulti3 | Riverstone | ||||||||||
Vineyard | VYR | 49.2 km | 14 July 1935 | MyMulti3 | Vineyard | ||||||||||
Mulgrave | MUV | 52.6 km | 1 December 1864 | MyMulti3 | Mulgrave | ||||||||||
Windsor | WSR | 55.0 km | 1 December 1864 | MyMulti3 | Windsor | ||||||||||
Clarendon | CRD | 57.2 km | 1870 | MyMulti3 | Clarendon | ||||||||||
East Richmond | ERD | 60.0 km | 2 July 1939 | MyMulti3 | East Richmond, Richmond | ||||||||||
Richmond | RCD | 60.7 km | 1 December 1864 | MyMulti3 | Richmond, North Richmond |
The current off-peak service pattern is as follows: (includes continuations onto North Shore Line)
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