Avoca railway line

Avoca
Overview
Type Branch
Status Freight only line
Stations 4
Operation
Opened 1874
Completed 1890
Closed 2005
Rolling stock Ballast, Grain
Technical
Line length 87.769 km (54.537 mi)
Number of tracks Single track
Route map
Victorian-rail-map-2007.png

The Maryborough–Avoca–Ararat railway is a railway line in western Victoria, Australia. It is one of the few railway lines in the state to have been closed and then reopened. Today it is a standard gauge branch line connecting the Western SG with Bung Bong (ballast) and Dunolly (grain), running through Maryborough station.

History

The first section of line was opened as a branch from Maryborough to Avoca in October 1874, 24 kilometres in length, then was extended 62.8 kilometres to Ararat in November 1890, forming a through route between two main lines. In July 1959 the line between Avoca and Ararat was closed.[1] In October 1966 the line was reopened,[1] and in 1996 it was converted to standard gauge, along with the main Melbourne–Adelaide railway.[2]

The Avoca–Ararat section of the line has been unused for a number of years and Pacific National used it to store over 100 surplus grain wagons,[3] until many of them were reactivated to carry the 2011–2012 harvest.

The line is to be re-opened in 2016 as standard gauge and upgraded to 21 tonne axle loads, with insertion of over 100,000 new concrete sleepers. The second re-opening of this cross country line is primarily to allow for the carriage of mineral sands from Manangatang to a processing plant at Hamilton. The re-opening project includes the provision of a direct standard gauge connection between the Avoca and Hamilton lines at Ararat to avoid the need for trains to have to reverse at Ararat.

Line guide

Avoca railway
Legend
Mildura line at Maryborough station
Homebush
Avoca
Elmhurst
Ben Nevis
Serviceton Line at Ararat station

References

  1. 1 2 Sid Brown (March 1990). "Tracks Across the State". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society (Victorian Division). pp. 71–76.
  2. "VICSIG". www.vicsig.net. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  3. "Grain wagon must return". Weekly Times. Melbourne. March 5, 2011. Retrieved 2012-05-08.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.