The Exhibition railway line is a special-purpose railway line in Brisbane, the state capital of Queensland, Australia. It conveys Queensland Rail City network passengers during the Royal Queensland Show (locally known as "the Ekka") in August and rare other special events held in the showgrounds. It is informally known as the Ekka Loop.
Exhibition line | |
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Overview | |
Website | queenslandrail.com.au |
Technical | |
Track length | 3.4 km (2.1 mi) |
Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) |
Electrification | 1982 |
Goods trains also use the Exhibition line to access the Normanby marshalling yard and to travel across Brisbane while avoiding city stations and congestion between Bowen Hills and Roma Street stations. QR Traveltrain long-distance passenger services similarly use the Exhibition line to arrive at and depart from Roma Street station. Empty City network and Traveltrain sets also use the line to access the Normanby train washing facility and the Mayne locomotive and electric depot.
History
editWhen the Roma St to Sandgate railway opened in 1882, it had been constructed via Normanby to avoid the need for land resumptions through the Brisbane CBD.[1] When passenger trains were diverted to the new line via Central station in 1890, traffic diminished significantly, and the section between Exhibition station and Mayne along with Normanby station was closed in 1900.[2]
Traffic on the QR system continued to grow, and so the closed section was reopened in 1911 to allow goods trains from the North Coast line to use that route to reach Roma St, the main goods yard in Brisbane. When the locomotive and carriage sheds were relocated from Roma St to Mayne in 1927, the line was duplicated to deal with the additional empty trains travelling to and from Brisbane's main terminating station.[citation needed]
The line was electrified in 1982 to allow empty electric units to travel to and from Roma St.[citation needed]
In 2023, the line was realigned as part of the Cross River Rail project in what was described as one of the longest and most complicated pieces of track work ever undertaken in South East Queensland.[3] Works included a new 150-metre bridge outside the Brisbane Showgrounds.[citation needed]
Line guide and services
editServices stop at city stations (Roma Street, Central and Fortitude Valley) before the loop leaves the main line in the middle of platform 4 of Bowen Hills, and therefore can not stop here for passengers. The service runs in both directions.[citation needed]
Passengers for/from the Airport, Doomben, Caboolture, Ferny Grove, Nambour and Gympie North, Redcliffe Peninsula and Shorncliffe lines change at Central or Fortitude Valley, and Beenleigh, Cleveland, Gold Coast, Ipswich, Rosewood and Springfield lines at Roma Street.[citation needed]
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References
edit- ^ Kerr, J. 'Triumph of Narrow Gauge' Boolarong Publications 1990
- ^ Kerr, J. 'Brunswick St, Bowen Hills & Beyond' ARHS 1988
- ^ Chan, Ray (5 April 2023). "Exhibition line realigned for bridge crossing". Rail Express. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
External links
edit- Queensland Rail
- Translink
- "South East Queensland Train Network Map" (PDF). Translink. 1 May 2020.