Pinkenba railway station

Pinkenba railway station was originally the terminus station of the Pinkenba Line, just 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) (6 mi) from the Brisbane central business district; 14.1 kilometres (8.8 mi) from Central station by rail. It opened in 1897, rebuilt in 1969 with a second new station closer to the township of Pinkenba, the first station reverted as Shunters Quaters and closed in 1993 to all passenger traffic.

Pinkenba
LocationEagle Farm Road, Pinkenba
Coordinates27.4268°S 153.1163°E / -27.4268; 153.1163
Owned byQueensland Rail
Line(s)
  Pinkenba Line
Platforms1 side platform
ConnectionsBus
Other information
Fare zone2
History
Opened1 April 1897
Closed27 September 1993 (1993-09-27)
Rebuilt1969 (New Second Station)
Services
Preceding station   Queensland Rail   Following station
toward Roma Street
Pinkenba LineTerminus

History

The station c.1935
Pinkenba station in 2007

The Pinkenba line opened 1 April 1897 and during World War I (1914 to 1918) and World War II (1939 to 1945), troop camps were located in Pinkenba and Meeandah localities because of deep berthing available to ships at Pinkenba on the mouth of the Brisbane River. Passenger ships of the Orient Steam Navigation Company, later P&O, used the adjacent Pinkenba Wharf, and special trains ran from Brisbane to Pinkenba.[1]

On 29 August 1906, a contract was let for refreshment rooms to be constructed at Pinkenba station, at a cost of £318. These operated until the new Pinkenba station – still standing today – opened in 1969.[1]

In 1988 part of the line was electrified, but only as far as Eagle Farm station; diesel-hauled carriages infrequently operated passenger services to Pinkenba. On 27 September 1993, all passenger services on the line were suspended by the Goss Labor Party government as part of a statewide rationalisation of the rail network with the closing or suspending of under-utilised or unprofitable rail lines.

Current status

In 2005, the 1969 Pinkenba railway station area became a rubbish recycling site, with large amounts of dirt dumped over the terminus siding that housed Pinkenba station. The 1969 station building did remain until 2016, although badly damaged and used as a dumping ground, and the track that connected the station to the Pinkenba Line has been removed. By 2017, the building was demolished. QR still owns the land.[2]

The original 1897 station building was later removed to a Grain Corp site. Then circa 2001 the station building was cut in half and removed pending the redevelopment of the site. The right-hand section went to a private home in Shore Street East, in Cleveland and the left-hand section was transferred by ferry to North Stradbroke Island and serves as the ticket office for Stradbroke Ferries.

Replacement bus service

The bus stop for the replacement TransLink bus service (303) is immediately outside Pinkenba station in Eagle Farm Road.

gollark: Seriously, I have no idea who "generic rust advocate 5" is or what they're doing here.
gollark: HELPI DON'T KNOW WHO RUST ADVOCATE 5 IS
gollark: Oh hey coltrans.
gollark: Sleep is uncool anyway.
gollark: Oh no.

See also

References

  1. Hallam, Greg (2005). Brisbane's Biography (Steamtrain Sunday). QR Limited.
  2. Nicholls, Tim (15 March 2007). "Record of Proceedings" (PDF). Hansard. Brisbane: Queensland Government. First Session of the Fifty-Second Parliament: 1155. ISSN 1322-0330. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2007.
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