Bomaderry railway station
Bomaderry | |
---|---|
NSW TrainLink intercity train terminal ← Berry | |
Location |
Meroo Street, Bomaderry New South Wales New South Wales Australia |
Coordinates | 34°51′14″S 150°36′35″E / 34.8538°S 150.6098°ECoordinates: 34°51′14″S 150°36′35″E / 34.8538°S 150.6098°E |
Owned by | RailCorp |
Operated by | NSW TrainLink |
Line(s) | South Coast |
Distance | 153.348 km from Central[1] |
Platforms | 1, 108 metres[1] |
Tracks | 4[1] |
Train operators | NSW TrainLink |
Bus operators |
|
Construction | |
Structure type | At-grade |
Parking | Yes |
Bicycle facilities | Yes |
Disabled access | Easy Access |
Architectural style | Inter-war functionalism[2] |
Other information | |
Website | Sydney Trains |
History | |
Opened | 2 June 1893[3] |
Previous names |
Nowra Bomaderry (Nowra) |
Traffic | |
Passengers (2014) | 180,166[4] |
Rank | 203rd of 307[5] |
Bomaderry is a single-platform intercity train station located in Bomaderry, New South Wales, Australia, on the South Coast railway line. The station serves NSW TrainLink diesel multiple unit trains to Kiama.[6] Early morning and late night services to the station are provided by train replacement bus services.[6] A siding near the station is used by freight trains operated by the Manildra Group.
In 1887 the southern terminus of the South Coast Line reached "North Kiama Station" (now known as Bombo). The NSW Government Railways intended for the line to eventually connect with the Sydney network in the north, and Jervis Bay or even Eden in the south. In 1886, the firm of W. Monie & J. Angus was awarded the contract to begin the extension south. A major milestone in the work was completion of the 342-metre truss bridge over the Shoalhaven River in 1881.[7] Bomaderry Station opened as the new – and, it was assumed, temporary – southern terminus two years later.[2] But while the connection to Sydney opened in October 1888, progress towards Jervis Bay stalled.[8] The bridge was converted for road traffic instead.
Now confirmed as a permanent railhead, and with Nowra on the Shoalhaven's opposite bank expanding, Bomaderry Station's significance grew. A large goods yard was added, along with a 60-foot turntable (1914), dairy siding (1921), weighbridge (1921), railway crew barracks (1924), Vacuum Oil Company siding (1929) and crane (1934). The goods yard and goods shed were further extended in 1944.[2]
The original platform building was destroyed in a fire in 1945 and rebuilt in the inter-war functionalist style the following year. According to the Heritage Branch, "The building is divided into three bays, each recessed behind the other to create a "stepped" effect. There are two semi-circular ended lobbies flanking the projecting parcels office on the west elevation. The circular lobby has been achieved by the use of projecting square masonry ribs (rather than callow bricks) to support a flat, concrete slab roof over the lobbies. ... one of the finest representative examples of an inter-war functionalist style railway building in the state. ... particularly noteworthy for its use of curved elements."[2]
Bomaderry was also noteworthy as the terminus for the last section of the NSW metropolitan rail network to use the electric staff signalling system. The system, installed in 1908, was replaced with automated signalling in 2014.[9]
Operations
Between 1933 and 1991, Bomaderry was the terminus of a direct limited-stops service to Sydney, known as the South Coast Daylight Express. Today, most services are shuttles between Bomaderry and Kiama, the terminus of the electrified network. In 2005, then Minister for Transport John Watkins announced that electrification would be extended to Bomaderry at an unspecified future date, but the proposal did not progress.[10]
Local bus services operated by Nowra Coaches, Shoal Bus and other operators connect the station with destinations in and around Nowra, Shoalhaven Heads, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet and Kangaroo Valley.[11][12]
Electronic ticketing, in the form of the Opal smart card, has been available at Bomaderry since 2014.[13]
Track layout
The Bomaderry yard contains four tracks: a platform road, a passing loop and two goods sidings. A security compound for overnight storage of trains is located on a small siding south of the station. A 1.8-kilometre "master siding" diverges from the number-two goods siding opposite the station, passes over Railway Street and Bolong Road, and passes Shoalhaven Steel Supplies, Shoalhaven Starches (Manildra Group) and the former dairy.[1]
Platforms & Services
Platform | Line | Stopping pattern | Notes |
1 | Terminating services; services to Kiama | [14] |
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References
- 1 2 3 4 Asset Standards Authority (30 April 2015). "Train Operating Conditions (TOC) Manual – Track Diagrams (version 3.0)" (PDF).
- 1 2 3 4 Office of Environment & Heritage (7 December 2009). "NSW heritage register: Bomaderry railway station and yard group". Retrieved 16 August 2015.
- ↑ Bozier, Rolfe. "NSWrail.net: Bomaderry Station".
- ↑ Bureau of Transport Statistics (March 2015). "Summary of train journeys (official patronage figures)".
- ↑ Bureau of Transport Statistics (November 2012). Compendium of Sydney Rail Travel Statistics, 8th Edition.
- 1 2 Sydney Trains (October 2014). "South Coast Line – Bomaderry or Port Kembla to Central and Bondi Junction".
- ↑ "Nowra Bridge over the Shoalhaven River", Roads and Traffic Authority, 30 March 2004. Retrieved on 2008-11-20
- ↑ Bozier, Rolfe. "NSWrail.net: South Coast Line".
- ↑ Sydney Trains. "End of the line: the electric train staff system – video transcript" (PDF).
- ↑ "Govt announces Kiama-Bomaderry rail electrification". ABC News. 1 July 2005.
- ↑ Shoal Bus Pty Ltd. "Network map".
- ↑ Nowra Coaches Pty Ltd. "Timetables".
- ↑ Opal card available on all Sydney trains by next Friday Sydney Morning Herald 20 March 2014
- ↑ "South Coast line timetable" (PDF). NSW Trainlink. 20 October 2013 [amended February 2015].
External links
- Media related to Bomaderry railway station at Wikimedia Commons
- Station details: Bomaderry at Sydney Trains website