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Kaiwharawhara railway station

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Kaiwharawhara
Metlink regional rail
General information
LocationWestminster Street, Kaiwharawhara, Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates41°15′36.18″S 174°47′28.92″E / 41.2600500°S 174.7913667°E / -41.2600500; 174.7913667
Owned byGreater Wellington Regional Council
Line(s)Melling Line
Hutt Valley Line
Kapiti Line
PlatformsIsland (2)
TracksMain line (4)
Other information
Fare zone2[1]
History
Opened20-04-1874
Closed23-11-2013
Rebuilt1911, 1935
ElectrifiedJune 1940
Previous namesKaiwarra
Former services
Preceding station Transdev Wellington Following station
Former Services
Ngauranga
towards Melling
Melling Line Wellington
Terminus
Ngauranga
towards Upper Hutt
Hutt Valley Line
Takapu Road
towards Waikanae
Kapiti Line

Kaiwharawhara railway station, a former railway station on the North Island Main Trunk and the Wairarapa Line in Wellington in New Zealand, closed in 2013.[2] It was the first station north of Wellington, serving the early suburb of Kaiwharawhara. Prior to its closure it was served by trains operated by Tranz Metro as part of the Metlink network on the Melling Line, the Hutt Valley Line and the Kapiti Line.

Kaiwharawhara Station closed temporarily on 13 June 2013 due to safety concerns about the pedestrian overbridge, which a visual inspection carried out by the Regional Council found to have advanced corrosion.[3] The station closed permanently on 21 November 2013 and the overbridge was dismantled in March 2014.[4]

Kaiwharawhara had a unique platform arrangement for New Zealand.[5] Looking north, the left-hand island platform was for up trains, the right-hand platform for down trains. The inner faces were used by Kapiti Line services on the NIMT, the outer faces by Melling Line and Hutt Valley Line services on the Wairarapa Line.

History

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The Wairarapa Line reached the south bank of the Kaiwarra Stream in July 1873,[6] and this section of line opened on 14 April 1874.[7] Trains initially did not stop at Kaiwarra, but on 20 April Kaiwarra opened as a stop.[8]

Kaiwarra received its first building in late 1875.[8] About 1879 the station received a class 6 passenger shelter costing £160. It did not have either crossing loops or sidings.[9]

Kaiwharawhara railway station, looking south in the direction of Wellington.

Early in the 20th century it was decided to duplicate the line between Wellington and Lower Hutt. Preparatory work was started in 1903 with construction commencing from Petone the following year, reaching Kaiwarra in 1909 and Wellington on 4 April 1911.[10] A new station building designed by George Troup was erected in 1911.

In the mid-1930s, in conjunction with the construction of the Tawa Flat Deviation and the opening of the new Wellington station on the 19 June 1937, and the closure of the old Thorndon and Lambton stations, new up and down mains were laid through Kaiwarra to the east of the existing Hutt Valley main lines for the new Paekakariki Line (now the Kapiti Line). The Kaiwarra signal box was dismantled and the old railway station replaced with two new narrow island platforms with simple passenger shelters. The western platform was for the Hutt Valley line and the eastern platform for the Paekakariki line.[11]

The Kaiwarra station was renamed Kaiwharawhara station on 9 February 1951 by a decision of the New Zealand Geographic Board.[12]

The current configuration of railway tracks was adopted in 1965 when the down Hutt Valley Line track was moved from the west to the east of the Kapiti Line tracks. This was made possible by additional harbour reclamation during the construction of the Wellington Urban Motorway. The new layout reduced junction conflicts further south at Wellington Distant Junction near Aotea Key where the North Island Main Trunk and the Wairarapa Lines combined into a single up main and single down main. With the new layout, the western island platform was for up trains and the eastern platform for down trains.

With the rearrangement of the tracks, the old down main from Ngauranga to Kaiwharawhara became the up main and the old up main was connected to the shunt road from Distant Junction and the loop at Ngauranga. This gave a fifth track through Kaiwharawhara running on the western side of the four main lines, as was evidenced for many years by the extra track with overhead wiring still in place, which was used to access an oil depot (just south of the Kaiwharawhara Stream), the NZR Signals Depot, and several warehouses.[13]

The original simple passenger shelters on each platform constructed in 1937 were removed some time during the 1990s.[14] These shelters were open to face the track on each side with a central wall. Clearance between the central wall and the platform-edges was limited, affording restricted standing room between the walls and passing trains.

Services

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Before the closure of the station in 2013, off-peak trains stopped here half-hourly on the Hutt Valley, and hourly on the Melling Line with more frequent services during peak periods, while Kapiti Line trains stopped on request only to pick up passengers waiting for up or northbound trains and to drop off passengers on down trains.

Facilities and possible emergency use

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Repair and prefabrication or prewiring of signalling equipment was carried out at the Kaiwharawhara Depot from c1900 until 1993, when it was transferred to Woburn railway station.[15]

There are now no shelters or other buildings nor any dedicated car parking. Access was via a footbridge from Westminster Street. In 2013, the overbridge constructed in 1937 was found to be seriously corroded and the station was closed as a result. The overbridge was demolished in March 2014 with the stairs, previously renewed and in good condition, relocated to Trentham station.

The platforms were retained for emergency egress from trains.[16]

On 3 July 2019, a derailed goods wagon [17] [18] damaged both tracks out of Wellington serving all lines apart from the Johnsonville Line and stopping most commuter services into Wellington; partial service was not restored until the next day. [19] [20] [21] [22] All the lines reduce to two or three lines in the Wellington rail yards, and a fourth line may be added in the future. Alterations to Kaiwharawhara Station so it could be used as an emergency Wellington terminal for the Hutt, Kapiti and Melling lines are to be completed in 2020. Available buses (c10) could then have run a shuttle service into Wellington, but were insufficient to run from the Hutt Valley or Kapiti stations. [23]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Metlink. "Text description of fare zone boundaries". Greater Wellington Regional Council. Archived from the original on 18 December 2007. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  2. ^ "Notice of final decision to assign place names". New Zealand Gazette - Te Kahiti o Aotearoa. New Zealand Gazette Office at the Department of Internal Affairs. 29 August 1996. p. 2470. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2008. 6. North Island Main Trunk From Wellington to Auckland ... 28. Wairarapa Line From Wellington to Woodville ...
  3. ^ "Kaiwharawhara Station Closed". Metlink. 13 June 2013. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  4. ^ "Station closes for good". stuff.co.nz. 21 November 2013. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  5. ^ Hoy, Douglas G. (1970). "The Railway Today". Rails Out Of The Capital: Suburban Railways, Wellington. Wellington: The New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society. p. 77. The station with its two long island platforms and four parallel running tracks is the only one of its kind in the Dominion.
  6. ^ Cameron, Water Norman (1976). "Chapter 4: Construction and Operation, Wellington to Upper Hutt". A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. Wellington: New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society. p. 73. ISBN 0-908573-00-6. It was not until July 1873 that the rails reached the south bank of the Kaiwarra Stream, ...
  7. ^ "Chapter 4: Construction and Operation, Wellington to Upper Hutt". A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. p. 77. The Hutt Railway was opened this morning ... Thus did the Evening Post of 14 April 1874 record the opening of the railway ...
  8. ^ a b "Early Years". Rails Out Of The Capital: Suburban Railways, Wellington. p. 13. Kaiwharawhara and Ngauranga became stopping places on April 20th 1874, but the first buildings were not erected until later in the following year.
  9. ^ "Chapter 4: Construction and Operation, Wellington to Upper Hutt". A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. p. 89. At this time Kaiwarra and Ngahauranga both received sixth-class stations, costing £160 each. Neither station had crossing loops or sidings as yet.
  10. ^ "Chapter 13: Branch Lines and Sidings". A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. pp. 291, 293. Surveys and preparatory work were carried out in 1903 and in the following year work began at Lower Hutt and Petone ... The duplication reached Ngahauranga in 1908, Kaiwarra in 1909, and finally Wellington in 1911. The entire double line from Lower Hutt to Lambton was opened on 4 April 1911 ...
  11. ^ "Chapter 10: The Stations". A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. pp. 223, 225. New main lines were laid and connected at Kaiwarra. ... The Hutt Valley main lines had been completely relocated and the Kaiwarra signal box dismantled. All new signalling equipment and underground cabling were being installed, and the overhead wiring for electrification of the Johnsonville line was being erected.
  12. ^ New Zealand Railway Observer volume 18, January–February 1951 page 17
  13. ^ "Appendix D: Diagrams". Rails Out Of The Capital: Suburban Railways, Wellington. p. 107.
  14. ^ "The Railways Today". Rails Out Of The Capital: Suburban Railways, Wellington. p. 77. A foot bridge leads in from the street and two small waiting sheds are the only facilities available.
  15. ^ Heine, Richard W. (2000). Semaphore to CTC: Signalling and train working in New Zealand, 1863-1993. Wellington: New Zealand Railway & Locomotive Society. pp. 104–105. ISBN 0-908573-76-6.
  16. ^ "Kaiwharawhara train station overbridge stairs relocated". The Dominion Post. Wellington: Fairfax NZ News. 31 March 2014. Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  17. ^ "Train drags derailed wagons". Stuff (Fairfax). 3 July 2019.
  18. ^ "55-year-old wagon". Stuff (Fairfax). 3 July 2019.
  19. ^ "20,000 commuters stranded". Stuff (Fairfax). 3 July 2019.
  20. ^ "Train disruptions continue". Stuff (Fairfax). 4 July 2019.
  21. ^ "Resilience of network questioned". Stuff (Fairfax). 4 July 2019.
  22. ^ "Some trains back running". Stuff (Fairfax). 3 July 2019.
  23. ^ "Contingency Plan". Stuff (Fairfax). 4 July 2019.
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