Kilmore East
PTV regional rail station
General information
LocationOgradys Road,
Kilmore East, Victoria 3764
Shire of Mitchell
Australia
Coordinates37°17′37″S 144°59′01″E / 37.2936°S 144.9835°E / -37.2936; 144.9835
Owned byVicTrack
Operated byV/Line
Line(s)Seymour Shepparton
(Tocumwal)
Distance63.49 kilometres from
Southern Cross
Platforms2 side
Tracks3
ConnectionsRegional bus Bus
Construction
Structure typeGround
Parking116
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
StatusOperational, staffed part-time
Station codeKME
Fare zoneMyki Zone 3/4 overlap
WebsitePublic Transport Victoria
History
Opened18 April 1872 (1872-04-18)
Previous namesKilmore (1872-1888)
Services
Preceding station Railways in Victoria V/Line Following station
Wandong Seymour line Broadford
towards Seymour
Shepparton line Broadford
towards Shepparton
Location
Kilmore East is located in Victoria
Kilmore East
Kilmore East
Location within Victoria

Kilmore East railway station is located on the North East line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the town of Kilmore East, and opened on 18 April 1872 as Kilmore. It was renamed Kilmore East on 1 October 1888.[1][2]

The town of Kilmore is some distance to the west, at a much higher elevation, and was unable to be served directly by the main-line railway.

There is a disused goods shed at the station, as well as a staffed signal box.[3] Approximately three kilometres in the down direction from the station is a siding which is used to load material from the Apex quarry.

History

The station opened as Kilmore on 18 April 1872, the railway having opened in the same year, as part of the North East line to Wodonga. Located 2 miles (3.2 km) east of the existing town, the site was surveyed for a new settlement to be called Gavan Duffy, but that did not eventuate. When the branch line from Kilmore Junction to Heathcote opened in 1888, a new Kilmore station was provided closer to the town on the new line, and the original station was renamed Kilmore East.[4]

A timber building was provided on the down platform (Platform 2) in 1878, to replace four temporary structures. A temporary refreshment room operated at the station in 1873, until the one at Seymour was opened. The present station building dates from 1939.[4]

By 1878, a number of sidings for timber loading existed, and interlocking of the signals was provided in 1899. A new lever frame was installed in 1914, when more sidings were added.[2]

In 1962, the Melbourne-Albury standard gauge line opened to the east of the station. In 1969, a crossover and connections to No. 3 and No. 4 roads, all located at the down end of the station, were abolished.[1][2]

The former locomotive water tank at the station was dismantled on 7 April 1973.[5] In 1979, No. 3 road was booked out of use.[1]

The Apex quarry siding was opened three kilometres north of Kilmore East in 1976, but the majority of the other sidings had been removed by the late 1980s.[2]

In 2008, construction began on a seven-kilometre-long "passing lane" on the parallel standard gauge line, as part of the Australian Rail Track Corporation's Melbourne-Sydney railway upgrade project. The passing lane extends from south of Kilmore East station towards Broadford.[6]

Platforms and services

Kilmore East has two side platforms. It is served by V/Line Seymour and Shepparton line trains.[7]

Platform 1:

Platform 2:

Mitchell Transit operates one bus route to and from Kilmore East station, under contract to Public Transport Victoria:

  • Kilmore Town Service[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kilmore East Vicsig
  2. 1 2 3 4 Andrew Waugh. "Victorian Station Histories - Kilmore East" (PDF). VR History. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
  3. Kilmore East Signal Box (KME) Vicsig
  4. 1 2 Turton, Keith W (1973). Six And A Half Inches From Destiny. Australian Railway Historical Society. p. 90. ISBN 0-85849-012-9.
  5. "Way and Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. May 1973. p. 93.
  6. Program of Works South Improvement Alliance
  7. Seymour - Melbourne Public Transport Victoria
  8. "Kilmore Town Service". Public Transport Victoria.
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