Sale railway station, Victoria

Sale railway station is located on the Gippsland line in Victoria, Australia, serving the town of Sale. The original station opened on 1 June 1877, as the terminus of the line from Morwell, before the line was extended to Stratford Junction on 8 May 1888.[1][2]

Sale
PTV regional rail station
Platform and station building, September 2015
LocationPettit Drive
Sale, Victoria 3850
Australia
Coordinates38°06′12″S 147°03′14″E
Owned byVicTrack
Operated byV/Line
Line(s)Gippsland line
Distance206.02 kilometres from Southern Cross
Platforms1
Tracks3
Train operatorsV/Line
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
Other information
StatusOperational, staffed
Station codeSAE
WebsitePublic Transport Victoria
History
Opened1 June 1877 (1877-06-01)
Rebuilt4 December 1983
ElectrifiedNo
Services
Preceding station   V/Line   Following station
Rosedale
Bairnsdale line
towards Bairnsdale

This original station was located in the town of Sale itself, east of Reeve Street. It was a dead-end terminus, with the line from Melbourne and the line to Stratford both entering from the west. Trains continuing along the line beyond Sale were required to reverse at the station, or use the Traralgon-Maffra-Stratford line, which avoided Sale altogether. At the peak of operations, the yard had five roads, passenger and goods platforms, a goods shed, a 47-lever signal box, a cattle yard, an engine shed, a coal stage, and a turntable.[2]

There was also a short branch line to the Sale Wharf, as well as a number of industrial sidings in the area, serving cool stores, fuel depots, a gas works, a flour mill, woollen mills, and stockyards.[2]

After many years of discussions between the local council and rail authorities,[3] the station was relocated in 1983, to a site outside the town, on a new section of track which linked the Melbourne and Stratford lines, without the need to run in and out of the original station. This formed a rail triangle for a short period of time. The goods facilities were first to be moved, on 28 September 1983,[4] using part of the Sale – Stratford line as the base of the yard. The last train ran to the old station on 12 November 1983, with the new station officially opening on 4 December the same year.[2] The last remnant of the railway line arriving directly into Sale was abolished in 1985, when parts of the former Port of Sale spur line were removed.[5] Full signalling was not provided until 1987.[2] Station staff were withdrawn in 1993, but have since been restored.

Rail traffic beyond Sale ceased in December 1995, and Sale became the terminus for all trains on the line. Road coach services continued to Stratford, Bairnsdale, Lakes Entrance, Orbost and further east, with some continuing into southern New South Wales. However, in mid-1999, log trains began running to Bairnsdale again, and the passenger service to Bairnsdale resumed on 3 May 2004.[1]

The original site of Sale station is now the Gippsland Centre Shopping Centre, although the signal box, level crossing gates, and two semaphore signals are statically preserved in situ.[6] To the west of the station, the Sale Industrial Sidings remain in place but unused, as do the goods sidings.[6] The sidings across from the platform were regularly used to allow Bairnsdale to Geelong log trains to cross passenger services, but log trains have ceased running.

Platforms & services

Sale has one platform. It is served by V/Line Bairnsdale line trains.[7]

Platform 1:

Looking towards Melbourne in 2018 with a 707 Operations heritage special in the siding.
gollark: Intel will probably never be the underdog - they have more money and are more diversified.
gollark: Then AMD will be Intel and probably equally anticompetitive!
gollark: Yes, praise the glory of ĀMD.
gollark: Yes, I know, it has a HEDT premium price.
gollark: That's probably just the 9900KS.

References

  1. Sale Vicsig
  2. Victorian Station Histories: Sale station
  3. "Traffic". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. October 1978. p. 208.
  4. "Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. December 1983. p. 344.
  5. "Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. May 1985. p. 147.
  6. Wong, Marcus. "Sale station". Wongm's Rail Gallery. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  7. Bairnsdale - Melbourne timetable Public Transport Victoria
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.