- Source: Williamstown Pier railway station
Williamstown Pier was the original terminus of the Williamstown railway line, on the Melbourne suburban rail system. It was in the suburb of Williamstown, to the west of central Melbourne. The station existed primarily to serve the Williamstown docks precinct.
History
Originally named Pier, it opened on 17 January 1859. It opened to passengers on 15 May 1881, and relocated to a new site on 8 January 1905.
The station contained a goods yard that was used for grain shipments, up until the 1960s.
By mid-1978, the station building was demolished and was replaced with two smaller brick structures. The last services terminated at the station on 25 March 1987, following a derailment on the sharply curved track leading to the station. All rails, sleepers, overhead wires and signals were removed by October 1988, with the platform track and overhead currently ending just under the Ann Street footbridge, at the down end of Williamstown station. The station was subsequently demolished, and replaced with a car park and a parkland.
Today little remains of Williamstown Pier remain mostly demolished aforementioned in the late 1980s until the early 1990s. A short section of disused tracks beyond Williamstown station is the only remains of the old line.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Williamstown Pier railway station
- Williamstown railway station
- Williamstown line
- North Williamstown railway station
- Williamstown, Victoria
- Altona railway station
- List of heritage buildings and sites in Williamstown, Victoria
- List of heritage-listed buildings in Melbourne
- Flinders Street railway station
- Werribee line