Sandton (Gautrain station)

Sandton
Gautrain rapid transit station
Line(s)
Platforms 1 island platform (upper level)
1 side platform (lower level)
Tracks 3
Construction
Depth 45 m (148 ft)
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened 8 June 2010
Services
Preceding station   Gautrain   Following station
TerminusAirport Line
toward Park Station
North-South Line
toward Hatfield

Sandton is a metro station on the Gautrain rapid transit system in Sandton, Johannesburg. It opened to traffic on 8 June 2010 with service to OR Tambo International Airport.

Location

Sandton station is located in the neighbourhood of the same name in northern Johannesburg, specifically near the Sandton City/Nelson Mandela Square developments at the intersection of Rivonia and West Streets.[1]

Transit-oriented development

Developers and the Gauteng government aimed to make Sandton station the centre of one of the first transit-oriented development projects in South Africa. Because of the area's financial importance, with the Johannesburg Stock Exchange being a major focal point, and location near a number of important roads, such development also required an upgrade of the arterial road network in the surrounding area.[2]

The area surrounding Sandton station was divided into six management areas, which cover land use, development density, and pedestrian accessibility. Management Area 1, bounded by Sandton Street, Katherine Street, Rivonia Road, and Fredman Drive, encircles Nelson Mandela Square and the immediate vicinity of the station and is planned to contain buildings of up to 40 storeys with a development density of 110 units per hectare, thus categorising it as high-density and mixed-use.[3] In addition, a series of pedestrian corridors traverse the district, creating a grid to enable more pedestrian-friendly development and to encourage walking and sustainability. Subsequent and more distant management areas have lower height restrictions of ten to fifteen storeys while maintaining the 110 units per hectare density requirement, which centralises development towards a defined central business district.[4]

Station layout

Architecturally, Sandton is unique amongst Gautrain stations. Although it is not the only underground station, it is the only one with a two-level platform arrangement. The upper level serves trains on the north-south axis of the system, with trains heading southbound to Park Station in central Johannesburg and northbound to Pretoria, while the lower level has only one platform and acts as the terminus for OR Tambo International Airport-bound trains.[5]

Services

Sandton station is the operational hub of the Gautrain system. Along with Marlboro, it is one of only two stations in the entire network to be served by all trains on the Airport and North-South lines.[6] In addition, Sandton also has six additional feeder bus routes bringing passengers from more distant areas to the station. Numbered S1 to S6, the buses travel to/from Wendywood (S2),[7] Rivonia (S3),[8] Randburg (S4),[9] Fourways (S5),[10] and Rosebank (S6),[11] as well as a Sandton CBD loop (S1).[12]

References

  1. Sandton station Gautrain Retrieved 24 May 2010
  2. Background to Sandton station Gautrain Retrieved 24 May 2010
  3. Sandton Gautrain station page 13 South African Cities Network Retrieved 9 June 2010
  4. Sandton Gautrain station page 14 South African Cities Network Retrieved 9 June 2010
  5. Sandton Gautrain station page 4 South African Cities Network Retrieved 25 May 2010
  6. Gautrain route map Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  7. S2: Sandton-Wendywood timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  8. S3: Sandton-Rivonia timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  9. S4: Sandton-Randburg timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  10. S5: Sandton-Fourways timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  11. S6: Sandton-Rosebank timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010
  12. S1: Sandton-Rivonia timetable Gautrain Retrieved 2 June 2010

Coordinates: 26°06′28″S 28°03′26″E / 26.1078°S 28.0572°E / -26.1078; 28.0572

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.