Carlingford railway line
{{About|2=the L4 Westmead & Carlingford Line service|3=Parramatta Light Rail}}
{{Short description|Defunct railway line in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia}}
{{Use Australian English|date=January 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}}
{{Infobox rail line
| box_width =
| name = Carlingford railway line
| logo =
| logo_width =
| logo_alt =
| image = Carlingford Line- Rydalmere.jpg
| image_alt =
| caption = A K set at Rydalmere station in December 2019, during the final days of heavy rail operation
| type =
| color = {{rcr|Sydney Trains|Carlingford}}
| system =
| status = Converted to light rail
| locale = Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
| start = Clyde
| end = Carlingford
| stations = 7
| routes = T6 Carlingford Line
| ridership2 = 569,000 (2018/19)
| open = 17 November 1888 to Camellia
| event1label = Extended to Carlingford
| event1 = 20 April 1896
| event2label = Electrified to Rosehill
| event2 = 12 December 1936
| event3label = Electrified to Carlingford
| event3 = 9 August 1959
| close = 5 January 2020
| owner = RailCorp (2004–2019)
| operator = Sydney Trains
| character =
| depot =
| stock =
| linelength_km = 7.19
| gauge = {{track gauge|sg|allk=on}}
| linenumber =
| electrification = {{1,500 V DC}} overhead catenary
| speed =
| website =
| map = {{Carlingford Line RDT}}
| map_state = collapsed
}}
The Carlingford railway line is a former heavy rail line in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was opened from Clyde to Subiaco (later renamed Camellia) in January 1885, then by means of the construction of a bridge across the Parramatta River, to Carlingford in April 1896. It closed on 5 January 2020 with most of the line converted to be part of Parramatta Light Rail which opened in December 2024. A short section of the line was retained for use by Sydney Trains.
Line description
File:Rydalmere railway station, from Victoria Road.JPG]]
The Carlingford line branched off the Western line at Clyde heading north and crossing Parramatta Road via a level crossing, before passing under the M4 Western Motorway to Rosehill station. It was a double track line to this point.
Immediately south of Rosehill, the two tracks joined, before dividing into two bi-directional tracks, the Sandown line and the Carlingford line. Rosehill station had two platforms; one four-car long platform on the Carlingford line and one platform which was approximately sixteen-cars long on the Sandown line track which was used for special events at Rosehill Gardens Racecourse.
Originally these operated as conventional platforms; the shorter platform being served by northbound services and the longer one by southbound services with the double track merging into a single track to the north of the station. However, on race days, the shorter platform would be served by services in both directions to allow for the section immediately north of the station on the southbound track to stable race day trains. In June 1992, the junction was moved to south of Rosehill station with the shorter platform served by Carlingford line services in both directions and the longer platform only by race day trains and Sandown line services.Signalling & Safeworking Railway Digest August 1992 page 312Camellia Railway Digest September 1992 pages 338–341
The line then headed in a north-easterly direction over the Parramatta River to Carlingford. The stations from Camellia to Carlingford consisted of a single platform of a sufficient length to accommodate four-carriage trains. There were no crossing loops or any further sections of double track on the line, and thus no capacity for trains to pass each other.
There were no signals past Rosehill, meaning the entire section of line was one block, meaning only one train could be in this section at any time. Trains entering or exiting this block were detected using an axle counter. The section between Rosehill and Clyde was controlled using conventional track circuits and signals.
=Stations=
{{#tag:mapframe| {{Map of T6 Carlingford Line}} | align="left" | width="350" | height="350" | longitude="151.0314" | latitude="-33.808" | zoom="12" | text=T6 interactive map}}{{clear|left}}
class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:left;"
!Name !Distance from !Railway line !Suburbs served !Other lines |
colspan=6 style=background:#{{rcr|Sydney Trains|Carlingford}}| Clyde - Carlingford |
---|
Clyde
|20.66 km |1882 |{{TFNSW lines|T1}}{{TFNSW lines|T2}} |
Rosehill
|22.42 km |1888 |Carlingford | |
Camellia
|22.95 km |1885 |Carlingford | |
Rydalmere
|24.01 km |1896 |Carlingford | |
Dundas
|24.84 km |1896 |Carlingford | |
Telopea
|26.34 km |1925 |Carlingford | |
Carlingford
|27.85 km |1896 |Carlingford | |
=Sidings=
File:Carlingford - CGF-Rosehill Signalling Sign.jpg
A number of industrial and car storage sidings have been built on the line."NSW Track and Signalling Diagrams", Australian Railway Historical Society (NSW Division)
Starting from the Clyde end:
- Prestressed Concrete Siding: located between Clyde station and the Parramatta Road crossing. Served the railways prestressed concrete manufacturing plant which no longer operates. Currently used to stable an automated track recording vehicle. The junction is on the branch down line with the points facing north (down).
- Shell Refinery Siding: located between A'Beckett Creek and Rosehill station. The siding and junctions points have been removed. Junction was on the branch up line with the points facing south (up).
- Rheem Siding and Loop: located at Rydalmere station. Served the Rheem factory. The siding consisted of a short loop line with junctions north and south of the original Rydalmere station and a siding branch into the factory itself at the southern end of the yard. The loop, factory branch and all junctions have been removed. The new Rydalmere station is now situated on the opposite side of the branch line from the original station and occupies the site of the former loop.
- Electricity Commission Siding: located at the southern end of Carlingford station. The siding was built to move large electrical transformers into the Carlingford Electrical sub-station, one of the major substations distributing electric power to Sydney. The siding and junction points have been removed. The junction was on the run-around loop with the points facing north.
- Carlingford Produce Siding and Loop: a locomotive run-around loop alongside Carlingford station and a siding serving the Carlingford Produce store. The produce store siding joined the run-around loop at the southern end of the station with the points facing south. The loop and siding, together with all their junctions, have been removed.
- Carlingford Car Storage Sidings: a two track siding north of Carlingford station connected to both the branch line and the locomotive run-around loop. The sidings and junctions have been removed.
History
File:Camellia Railway Bridge, Parramatta River (30479001205).jpg]]
File:Carlingford Line & Sandown Line.png lines]]
The line was opened in two sections: Clyde to Camellia was opened on 17 November 1888, and Camellia to Carlingford (then known as Pennant Hills) was opened on 20 April 1896."NSW Railway Passenger Services 1880-1905" Australian Railway History April 2005 Telopea station was added in 1925. Originally the line was privately owned by two companies: the line from Clyde to Rosehill was owned by John Bennett and the line from Rosehill to Carlingford was owned by the Rosehill Railway Company. The lines were taken over by their bank in 1896, with the Government purchasing the line in 1898 and recommencing services on 1 August 1900. The line was duplicated to just south of Camellia station on 19 June 1902.Railways and Tramways of the Parramatta Hills District Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin issue 210 April 1955 pages 50-54, 57-62The Carlingford-Clyde Branch Line Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin issue 446 December 1974 pages 266-283
The line from Clyde to Rosehill was electrified on 12 December 1936. The electrification was extended to Carlingford on 9 August 1959.Electrification from Clyde to Carlingford Railway Gazette 17 October 1958 page 476Carlingford Opened Electric Traction September 1959 page 12{{cite book|last=Churchman|first=Geoffrey|title=Railway Electrification in Australia & New Zealand|date=1995|publisher=IPL Books|location=Smithfield|page=94}} Passenger services to Sandown ceased on 19 December 1991.{{cite journal |title=Cityrail launches new timetable |journal=Railway Digest |date=1992 |issue=February 1992 |page=45}}
In 1996, the original iron lattice bridge over the Parramatta River was replaced. The new bridge only has one track, although it was built to allow a second track to be laid in the future. It sits on the refurbished piers of the original bridge.The Carlingford line's Camelia bridge project Railway Digest August 1996 pages 12/13
In early 2007, the pedestrian crossings at Telopea and Dundas stations were rebuilt. The new automatic crossings provide audible and visual warnings of an approaching train and a short time later close the metal gates.
Over the week of 20 to 26 October 2007, the section of track from Telopea to Carlingford was completely replaced, utilising concrete sleepers instead of timber ones.[https://web.archive.org/web/20071114164025/http://www.cityrail.info/trackwork/071022-Carlingford.jsp Carlingford line track upgrade] CityRail The section from Telopea to Rosehill was similarly upgraded over the fortnight of 22 June to 3 July 2009.[http://www.cityrail.info/service_updates/trackwork/090622-carlingford Carlingford Line track upgrade] CityRail {{dead link|date=August 2019}} The railway remains on timber sleepers from Rosehill to Clyde.
The line was colour-coded orange in CityRail promotional material until 1991 when it was coded yellow (along with the Western Line). From 2000 it has been colour-coded dark blue.[https://web.archive.org/web/20050207091934/http://www.cityrail.info/networkmaps/mainmap.jsp Network Map] CityRail
Until June 2010, the line carried oil trains to and from the Clyde Refinery on the Sandown line.Sandown: End of the Line Railway Digest September 2010 page 24 In October 2016, Sandown line traffic was officially suspended. A Stop Block was placed on the Sydney side of Access Road level crossing.
Modification proposals
The line's low frequency and low level of patronage led to various inquiries and studies into its future. A major problem was the level crossing over Parramatta Road, which held up traffic when trains travelled across it. Proposals included tunnel links to Clyde or Granville stations, or replacing the line altogether with a more frequent light rail or busway service.[https://web.archive.org/web/20100301183605/http://www.smh.com.au/national/transport-group-reveals-rail-plans-for-bay-light-express-20100126-mwev.html Transport group reveals rail plans for 'Bay Light Express'] Sydney Morning Herald 27 January 2010
The New South Wales Government originally planned for the Carlingford line to be part of Stage 2 of the Parramatta Rail Link. That plan would have incorporated the majority of the line, with the section between Carlingford and Camellia duplicated. Telopea, Dundas, and Rydalmere stations would also have been duplicated and upgraded to allow eight car trains. Camellia station would have been demolished, and Rosehill station closed and replaced by a new underground station with a preliminary name of 'Rosehill/Camellia'. Carlingford station would also have been replaced by an underground station. Various proposals were put forward, including a three-way underground junction near Carlingford, linking the station to the proposed North West Rail Link, as well as the line to Chatswood. In 2003, the Minister for Transport, Michael Costa announced that only Stage 1 of the line, from Chatswood to Epping, would be built, but the Carlingford line section was indefinitely postponed.
Under the Rail Clearways Project, announced in 2004, the line was to have had a crossing loop at Rydalmere, thus allowing an increase in train frequency to half-hourly throughout the day. However, that part of the Clearways Project was cancelled in November 2008."Rail Clearways for Sydney". Transit Australia. September 2004. p. 284[http://www.premier.nsw.gov.au/pdfs/08-09_Mini-Budget.pdf NSW Minibudget]{{Dead link|date=March 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} NSW Government November 2008
In August 2010, the federal government promised $2.6 billion towards the project, which, along with funding from the New South Wales Government, would have allowed the line to be extended from Epping to Parramatta via the Carlingford line. Work was to commence in 2011, with a projected 2017 finish. Following a change of government at the 2011 state election, the project was shelved. A large amount of land lies behind Carlingford station, for future extensions of the line.
=Parramatta Light Rail=
In 2013, Parramatta City Council published a feasibility study into a Western Sydney Light Rail network. The study proposed the construction of a light rail line from Parramatta to the Macquarie Centre, running parallel to the Carlingford line between Camelia and Dundas. The report noted that while the future of the railway line was a matter for the state government, conversion of the line to light rail would reduce the cost of the light rail's construction significantly.[http://www.parracity.nsw.gov.au/work/business_in_parramatta/strategy/solving_transport_problems/light_rail_for_western_sydney Western Sydney Light Rail Network] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150607105355/http://www.parracity.nsw.gov.au/work/business_in_parramatta/strategy/solving_transport_problems/light_rail_for_western_sydney |date=7 June 2015 }} Parramatta City Council
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In December 2015, the NSW government announced the Camellia to Carlingford section of the line would be converted to light rail, forming a branch of the Parramatta Light Rail network. That would replace the connection to the Sydney Trains network at Clyde with a link to Parramatta and Westmead.{{cite web|title=Parramatta Light Rail|url=https://www.transport.nsw.gov.au/projects/current-projects/parramatta-light-rail|date=23 July 2018|publisher=Transport for NSW|access-date=18 August 2019|archive-date=29 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190729105300/https://www.transport.nsw.gov.au/projects/current-projects/parramatta-light-rail|url-status=live}} As a consequence, the Carlingford line north of Parramatta Road was closed on 5 January 2020 to allow conversion works to take place.{{Gazette NSW|title=Transport Administration (Authority To Close Railway Lines – Carlingford And Sandown Lines) Order 2019|issue=66|page=2269|date=28 June 2019|url=https://gazette.legislation.nsw.gov.au/so/download.w3p?id=Gazette_2019_2019-66.pdf|access-date=28 June 2019}}{{cite web|title=Parramatta Light Rail – Stage 1: frequently asked questions|url=http://data.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/s3fs-public/PLR%20FS_FAQs_accessible2.pdf|publisher=Transport for NSW|access-date=17 February 2017|archive-date=17 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170217144506/http://data.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/s3fs-public/PLR%20FS_FAQs_accessible2.pdf|url-status=dead}} Much of the remaining section closed permanently. That included Rosehill station, which is not on the light rail route. The short section between Clyde and the Parramatta Road level crossing will remain open to allow access to Sydney Trains' track inspection depot.{{cite web|url=http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/t6-carlingford-line|title=Stage 1 of the Parramatta Light Rail|website=Parramatta Light Rail|access-date=29 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190729004228/http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/t6-carlingford-line|archive-date=29 July 2019|url-status=live}} The Sandown line was formally closed in July 2019.{{cite web|title=Parramatta Light Rail | Stage 1 – Westmead to Carlingford via Camellia: Environmental Impact Statement|url=https://majorprojects.accelo.com/public/e321246b890ccdedc23308fbc50f77ab/01.%20PLR_EIS_Volume%201A.pdf|publisher=Transport for NSW|access-date=24 August 2017|pages=5-65, 5-66|archive-date=16 June 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200616013133/https://majorprojects.accelo.com/public/e321246b890ccdedc23308fbc50f77ab/01.%20PLR_EIS_Volume%201A.pdf|url-status=live}} A replacement bus service, the route 535, was introduced from Parramatta to Carlingford, and is operated by Hillsbus."Carlingford line to close early next year". Railway Digest. November 2019. p. 15[https://web.archive.org/web/20191219005738/https://transportnsw.info/documents/timetables/13-535-Carlingford-to-Parramatta-20200105.pdf Route 535 timetable] Transport Info{{cite web|url=http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/news/t6-carlingford-line-close-5-january-2020|title=T6 Carlingford Line to close 5 January 2020|publisher=Parramatta Light Rail|date=9 October 2019|access-date=6 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191124010032/http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/news/t6-carlingford-line-close-5-january-2020|archive-date=24 November 2019|url-status=live}} The level crossing across Parramatta Road was removed in late January 2020.{{cite web|url=http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/news/boom-gates-are-gone-parramatta-road|title=Boom! Gates are gone on Parramatta Road|publisher=Parramatta Light Rail|date=29 January 2020|access-date=3 February 2020|archive-date=3 February 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200203021616/http://www.parramattalightrail.nsw.gov.au/news/boom-gates-are-gone-parramatta-road|url-status=live}}
Services
In its last years, all services on the line operated as shuttle services from Clyde.[https://web.archive.org/web/20191231062600/https://transportnsw.info/documents/timetables/93-T6-Carlingford-Line-20190907-20200104.pdf T6 Carlingford Line timetable] Transport for NSW 8 September 2019 A few peak hour services operated to and from Central, but these had been withdrawn years before the line closed.[https://web.archive.org/web/20060420073837/http://www.cityrail.info/timetable/ttable.jsp?line=cl&day=wd&dir=up T6 Carlingford Line timetable] CityRail 2004 With annual patronage of 569,000 for the year 2019, the Carlingford line was Sydney's least-used suburban railway line.
Remains
The original tracks and overhead wiring were removed in January 2020 with the stations at Rydalmere, Telopea, Camellia and Carlingford demolished from April to May 2020. The only remnants of the original railway that were integrated with the light rail were the Parramatta River bridge at Rydalmere and the former Dundas station building.{{Cite web|title=Sydney's newest ghost train platforms|url=https://medium.com/@brenden.wood/sydneys-newest-ghost-train-platforms-cdeabba97da|last=Wood|first=Brenden|date=14 April 2020|website=Medium|language=en|access-date=22 May 2020}}
Carlingford_railway_line,_truncation_at_Parramatta_Road.jpg|Truncation of the line just south of Parramatta Road, October 2022
Carlingford_railway_line,_former_Parramatta_Road_level_crossing.jpg|The site of the former level crossing at Parramatta Road, October 2022
Carlingford_railway_line,_former_alignment.jpg|The former alignment alongside James Ruse Drive, October 2022
Camellia_Railway_Station_site.jpg|The site of the former Camellia Station, construction of Light Rail underway,
October 2022
Rolling stock
Prior to the line being electrified, services were hauled by Z13 and Z20 class locomotives.{{cite book|last=Preston|first=Ron G|title=Tender into Tank|year=1984|publisher=New South Wales Rail Transport Museum|location=Sydney|pages=59, 151, 177|isbn=0-909862-18-4}} Some services were operated by CPH railmotors.{{cite book|last=Cooke|first=David|title=Railmotors and XPTs|publisher=Australian Railway Historical Society|year=1984|page=29|isbn=0-909650-23-3}} Electric services were operated by Standard suburban carriages and Sputnik Carriages then S sets and C sets in two and later four carriage formations from 1993 to 2019 then finally K and M sets from July 2019 to the line's closure. Set M30 held the honour of running the final revenue service for the T6 Carlingford Line.Two Car Suburban Electrics Re-Introduced Railway Digest December 1976 page 231
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{commons category-inline}}
{{Railway lines in New South Wales}}
{{Australian railway bridges|state=autocollapse}}
Category:Closed railway lines in Sydney
Category:Railway lines opened in 1896
Category:Railway lines closed in 2020
Category:Standard-gauge railways in Australia
Category:1896 establishments in Australia