Farlane station

{{Short description|Railway station in Ontario, Canada}}

{{Infobox station

| name=Farlane

| style = Via Rail

| image=Farlane station OSM map.png

| image_caption=Map showing the station stop, located at the north end of Cache Lake with a passing track to the north of the stop.

| address=Farlane, ON

| country = Canada

| coordinates = {{coord|50|00|25|N|94|12|01|W|region:CA-ON|display=inline,title}}

| line =

| other=

| structure= Sign post

| platform=

| tracks=

| parking=

| bicycle=

| baggage_check=

| passengers=

| pass_year=

| pass_percent=

| pass_system=

| opened=

| closed=

| rebuilt=

| electrified=

| accessible =

| code=

| owned=Via Rail

| zone=

| former=

| services= {{Adjacent stations|system=Via Rail|line=Canadian|left=Redditt|right=Canyon}}

| other_services_header = Former services

| other_services_collapsible = no

| other_services = {{Adjacent stations|system=Canadian National Railway|line=Main|left=Brinka|right=Jones}}

| mpassengers=

| map_type = Canada Ontario

| map_size = 300

| map_caption = Location of Farlane railway station in Ontario

}}

Farlane railway station is located in the community of Farlane in Unorganized Kenora District in northwestern Ontario, Canada.{{cite cgndb|id= FBDNS|title= Farlane|accessdate= 2011-07-04}} The station is on the Canadian National Railway transcontinental main line{{cite map|url= http://www.mto.gov.on.ca/english/traveller/map/images/pdf/northont/sheets/Map13.pdf |format= PDF|title= Map 13|series= Official road map of Ontario|publisher= Ministry of Transportation of Ontario|scale= 1 : 1,600,000|date= 2010-01-01|accessdate= 2011-08-15}} and is in use by Via Rail as a stop for transcontinental Canadian trains.

File:Farlane railway station Ontario.jpg

The station was built in the 1920s, mainly to serve recreational cottage community around Farlane and nearby lakes which were only accessible by rail. Located at Mile 113.4 of the Redditt Subdivision of the Canadian National, it was built as a standard Design No. 3 of the National Transcontinental Railway, it was typical of stations intended for remote cottage communities, it contained a waiting room, baggage and an operator's telegraph bay.Bruce Ballantyne, Canadian Railway Station Guide, Bytown Railway Society (1998), p. ON-21 The station has been unstaffed for many years but received some maintenance from cottagers to serve as a shelter with a bench for train passengers.Ron Brown, The Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore: An Illustrated History of Railway Stations in Canada, Dundurn Press (2008), p. 127

References

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