Opened 1 December 1917 Connection Bus Tracks 1 | Operated by Metro Connections Bus Owner VicTrack Platforms in use 1 | |
Similar Westona railway station, Laverton railway station - M, Seaholme railway station, Altona Beach, Mordialloc railway station |
Hamburg altona railway station germany 13th october 2014
Altona railway station is located on the Werribee line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the western Melbourne suburb of Altona, opening on 1 December 1917, as the terminus of the line from Newport.
Contents
- Hamburg altona railway station germany 13th october 2014
- History
- Platforms and services
- Transport links
- References
History
The railway to Altona opened on 9 November 1888, but to a station named Altona Beach, which was about a kilometre to the east of the current station. The line was privately owned from its inception, but the Victorian Railways (VR) took over train operations in 1917, opening a new Altona Beach station, on the present site, on 1 December 1917. For a period of time, de-motored McKeen railmotors were used as carriages on passenger services.
By 1924, the private company, which owned the Altona line, owed the VR £7,289, through guarantees against losses on operating the services, so the VR took full control of the line on 1 October 1924. The station was renamed Altona in 1938. There was a loop siding beside the platform for a number of years, and the line once extended west, to serve a brown coal mine a little to the north of where Westona station now stands.
By the early 1980s, the station, and the line itself, was under threat of closure, as recommended in the Lonie Report. However, the line was extended to Westona on 21 January 1985, and to Laverton, on 14 April 1985.
Platforms and services
Altona has one platform. It is serviced by Metro Trains' Werribee line services.
Platform 1:
Transport links
CDC Melbourne operates three routes via Altona station:
Dyson's Bus Services operates one route via Altona station:
Transdev Melbourne operates one SmartBus route to and from Altona station: