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Lilydale line

The Lilydale line is a commuter railway line in the city of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.[1] Operated by Metro Trains Melbourne, it is the city's sixth-longest metropolitan railway line at 37.8 kilometres (23.5 mi). The line runs from Flinders Street station in central Melbourne to Lilydale station in the east, serving 27 stations via Burnley, Box Hill, Ringwood, and Croydon.[2] The line operates for approximately 19 hours a day (from approximately 5:00 am to around 12:00 am) with 24 hour service available on Friday and Saturday nights. During peak hours, headways of up to 15 minutes are operated, with services every 20–30 minutes during off-peak hours.[3] Trains on the Lilydale line run in two three-car formations of X'Trapolis 100 trainsets.[4]

Lilydale line
X'Trapolis train at the platform of Lilydale station, the terminus of the Lilydale line.
Overview
Service typeCommuter rail
SystemMelbourne railway network
StatusOperational
LocaleMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
First service1 December 1882; 141 years ago (1882-12-01)
Current operator(s)Metro Trains
Former operator(s)
WebsiteOfficial website
Route
TerminiFlinders Street
Lilydale
Stops27 (including City Loop stations)
Distance travelled37.8 km (23.5 mi)
Average journey time59 minutes (not via City Loop)
Service frequency
  • 6–20 minutes weekdays peak
  • 30 minutes weekdays off-peak
  • 20 minutes weekend daytime
  • 30 minutes nights
  • 60 minutes early weekend mornings
  • Double frequency between Flinders Street and Ringwood in combination with Belgrave line
  • Extra services run between Flinders Street and either Blackburn or Ringwood on weekdays
Technical
Rolling stockX'Trapolis 100
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Electrification1500 V DC overhead
Track owner(s)VicTrack
Route map
h:mm
km
zone
1.2
Southern Cross
1
1.3
Flagstaff
1.9
Melbourne Central
3.0
Parliament
0:00
0.0
Flinders Street
0:03
2.6
Richmond
0:05
3.1
East Richmond
0:07
4.1
Burnley
0:09
5.7
Hawthorn
0:11
6.9
Glenferrie
0:13
7.7
Auburn
0:15
9.0
Camberwell
0:17
9.8
East Camberwell
1
0:19
11.0
Canterbury
1/2
0:21
11.7
Chatham
0:23
12.9
Union
1/2
0:27
14.9
Box Hill
2
0:29
16.6
Laburnum
0:31
17.4
Blackburn
0:34
19.5
Nunawading
0:36
21.2
Mitcham
0:39
23.2
Heatherdale
0:42
24.5
Ringwood
0:44
26.6
Ringwood East
0:48
29.8
Croydon
0:53
33.2
Mooroolbark
0:59
37.6
Lilydale
2
h:mm
km
zone

Sections of the Lilydale line opened as early as 1859, with the line fully extended to Lilydale by 1882. The line was built to connect Melbourne and Ringwood with the rural towns of Croydon, Mooroolbark, and Lilydale, among others.

Since the 2010s, due to the heavily utilised infrastructure of the Lilydale line, significant improvements and upgrades have been made. Different packages of work have upgraded the corridor to replace sleepers, upgrade signalling technology, introduce new rolling stock, and remove remaining level crossings.[5]

History edit

19th century edit

The line from Richmond to Hawthorn was opened initially to a temporary terminus at Pic Nic, just short of the Yarra River, in September 1860, and to Hawthorn in April 1861. It was extended to Camberwell in April 1882, then to Lilydale in early December of that same year.[6] Duplication from East Richmond to Hawthorn occurred less than a month after the Lilydale extension opened. Soon after, the same section was converted to double-line telegraph safeworking, with the section from Hawthorn to Camberwell being converted to Staff and Ticket working.

In May 1885, Hawthorn to Camberwell was duplicated. Duplication was extended to Box Hill in December 1888.[7]

20th century edit

Automatic signalling was introduced in December 1907 with the conversion of the section from East Richmond to Hawthorn to semi-automatic signalling, followed by Richmond to East Richmond being converted to automatic signalling in August 1919.[8] East Richmond to Camberwell was converted in two stages, both in October 1922, and Camberwell to Canterbury the following month.[8] Electrification occurred between Flinders Street and Box Hill in December 1922 and extended to Ringwood the following month, then to Croydon in November 1925, and to Lilydale in October 1925.[8] Conversion to automatic signalling resumed in April 1927 with the conversion of Canterbury to Surrey Hills, followed by Surrey Hills to Box Hill in October 1929.

The section from Croydon to Mooroolbark was duplicated in 1957, creating a long passing loop on this otherwise single-line section beyond Ringwood.[9] The section from Mooroolbark to Lilydale remains a single track. Automatic signalling conversions resumed in July 1958 with the section from Box Hill to Blackburn, followed by Mitcham to Ringwood in September of that year, and Blackburn to Mitcham in November 1960.[10] Hawthorn to Camberwell was triplicated in December 1963, and the triplication was extended to East Camberwell in November 1964.[11] Richmond to Burnley was quadruplicated in 1966–67, and triplication was extended to Box Hill in December 1971, followed by Burnley to Hawthorn in August 1972.[12] This left a short section of double track on the upside of Richmond, but this was quadruplicated with the construction of a flyover in 1973.

Ringwood to Croydon was converted to automatic signalling in November 1973 and duplicated in June 1984. Mooroolbark to Lilydale was converted to automatic signalling in June 1985.

The new Comeng trains were introduced to the Melbourne railway system in 1981. Initially, along with the Lilydale line, they were only allowed to operate on the Alamein, Belgrave, Dandenong and Glen Waverley lines, due to the width of the trains (3.05 metres (10 ft 0 in)).[13] The Comeng trains were introduced with the intention of replacing the last of the Tait sets and the majority of the Harris sets.

21st century edit

A 2007 restructure of train ticketing in Melbourne involved the removal of Zone 3, with Zone 3 stations being re-classified to Zone 2.[14] This brought the cost of train fares down, improving system accessibility to the public.

Future edit

Level Crossing Removals edit

 
The level crossing at Maroondah Highway, Lilydale, prior to its 2021 removal.

The Level Crossing Removal Project has announced the removal of all nine remaining level crossings on the Lilydale line, to be completed in stages from 2016 to 2025.[15] In 2016, two level crossings were removed at Mountain Highway and Scoresby Road, Bayswater, through the rail under road method.[5] These two removals also included a rebuilt Bayswater station and upgraded stabling facilities.[16] A further two crossings were removed at Blackburn Road, Blackburn, and Heatherdale Road, Ringwood in January 2017.[17] Both of these removals involved lowering the rail line under the roads, with a rebuilt Heatherdale station built as part of the project.[17] In 2021, an additional two level crossings were removed at Manchester Rd, Mooroolbark, and Maroondah Highway, Lilydale.[18] These two removals included two new elevated stations at Mooroolbark and Lilydale.[19] Union and Mont Albert Roads have also been removed by lowering the rail line in May 2023.[20] The removals also included closing Mont Albert and Surrey Hills stations, with a new station built in-between called "Union."[21] The final two crossings to be removed will include lowering the rail line below Dublin Road in Ringwood East, with a new Ringwood East station, to be completed in 2025[22], and a rail bridge above Coolstore Road in Croydon, with a new Croydon station by 2025[23]. The Coolstore Road level crossing removal will also include a newly elevated Croydon station.[24] In addition, the level crossing at Cave Hill Road in Lilydale will be permanently closed by 2025.[25]

Duplication edit

The Network Development Plan – Metropolitan Rail, released in 2012, highlighted future upgrades for the rail corridor between Mooroolbark and Lilydale. The development plan highlighted the need for the track to be duplicated between Moroolbark and Lilydale as well as the construction of a new train maintenance facility in the Lilydale area within the next 20 years (by 2032).[26] However, this project has not remained on the planning agenda, despite the significant work conducted by the Level Crossing Removal Project in the area, which has previously undertaken duplication works.

Network and operations edit

Services edit

Services on the Lilydale line operate from approximately 5:00 am to around 12:00 daily.[27] In general, during peak hours, train frequency is ~7 minutes on the Ringwood corridor (combined with the Belgrave line) and 10–20 minutes in the AM peak on the Lilydale line, while during non-peak hours, the frequency is reduced to 20–30 minutes throughout the entire route.[3] On Friday nights and weekends, services run 24 hours a day, with 60 minute frequencies available outside of normal operating hours.[28]

Train services on the Lilydale line are also subjected to maintenance and renewal work, usually on selected Fridays and Saturdays. Shuttle bus services are provided throughout the duration of work for affected commuters.[29]

Stopping patterns edit

Legend: Station status

  • Premium Station: Station staffed from first to last train
  • Host Station: Usually staffed during the morning peak, however, this can vary for different stations on the network.

Legend: Stopping patterns
Some services do not operate via the City Loop

  • ●: All trains stop
  • ◐: Some services do not stop
  • |: Trains pass and do not stop
Lilydale Services[30]
Station Zone Local Ltd Express Blackburn Ringwood Mooroolbark Shuttle
Flinders Street 1
Southern Cross
Flagstaff
Melbourne Central
Parliament
Richmond
East Richmond | |
Burnley | |
Hawthorn | |
Glenferrie
Auburn | |
Camberwell
East Camberwell |
Canterbury 1/2 |
Chatham |
Union
Box Hill 2
Laburnum
Blackburn
Nunawading
Mitcham
Heatherdale
Ringwood
Ringwood East
Croydon
Mooroolbark
Lilydale

Operators edit

The Lilydale line has had a total of six operators since its opening in 1882. The majority of operations throughout its history have been government run: from its first service in 1882 until the 1999 privatisation of Melbourne's rail network, four different government operators have run the line.[31] These operators, Victorian Railways, the Metropolitan Transit Authority, the Public Transport Corporation and Hillside Trains, have a combined operational length of 117 years. Hillside Trains was privatised in August 1999 and later rebranded as Connex Melbourne. Metro Trains Melbourne, the current private operator, then took over the operations in 2009. Both private operators have had a combined operational period of 24 years.[32]

Past and present operators of the Lilydale line:
Operator Assumed operations Ceased operations Length of operations
Victorian Railways 1882 1983 101 years
Metropolitan Transit Authority 1983 1989 6 years
Public Transport Corporation 1989 1998 9 years
Hillside Trains (government operator) 1998 1999 1 years
Connex Melbourne 1999 2009 10 years
Metro Trains Melbourne 2009 incumbent 14 years (ongoing)

Route edit

 
Interactive map of the Lilydale line in eastern Melbourne.
Lilydale (physical track)
Overview
StatusOperational with passenger services from Flinders Street to Lilydale
Owner
LocaleMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
Termini
Continues asHealesville
Warburton
Connecting linesAll metropolitan, regional, and interstate
Former connections
Stations
  • 26 current stations
  • 1 under construction
  • 5 former stations
  • 1 former siding
Service
ServicesLilydale
History
Commenced1 December 1882 (1882-12-01)
Opened
  • Princes Bridge to Richmond on 8 February 1859 (1859-02-08)
  • To Pic-nic on 24 September 1860 (1860-09-24)
  • To Hawthorn on 13 April 1861 (1861-04-13)
  • Flinders Street to Princes Bridge on 18 December 1865 (1865-12-18)
  • To Camberwell on 3 April 1882 (1882-04-03)
  • To Lilydale on 1 December 1882 (1882-12-01)
Completed1 December 1882 (1882-12-01)
Electrified
  • Flinders Street to Box Hill on 19 December 1922 (1922-12-19)
  • To Ringwood on 30 January 1923 (1923-01-30)
  • To Croydon on 28 November 1924 (1924-11-28)
  • To Lilydale on 30 November 1925 (1925-11-30)
Technical
Line length37.8 km (23.49 mi)
Number of tracks
  • Twelve tracks: Flinders Street to Richmond
  • Four tracks: Richmond to Burnley
  • Triple track: Burnley to Box Hill
  • Double track: Box Hill to Mooroolbark
  • Single track: Mooroolbark to Lilydale
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Electrification1500 V DC overhead
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph) – Electric
SignallingAutomatic block signaling
Maximum incline1 in 40 (2.5%)

The Lilydale line forms a curved route from the Melbourne central business district to its terminus in Lilydale. The route is 37.8 kilometres (23.5 mi) long and predominantly double-tracked, however, between Flinders Street station and Richmond, the track widens to 12 tracks, narrowing to four tracks between Richmond and Burnley before narrowing to 3 tracks between Burnley and Box Hill. Finally, the line narrows to two tracks between Box Hill and Mooroolbark before narrowing to a single track to its terminus.[33][26] After Mooroolbark, passing loops and island platforms are present throughout the remaining track to allow trains to pass. Sections of the line have been elevated or lowered into a cutting to eliminate level crossings.[34]

The line follows the same alignment as the Alamein, Belgrave, and Glen Waverley lines, with the four services splitting onto different routes at Burnley. The Alamein, Belgrave, and Lilydale services continue till the Alamein line splits off at Camberwell, with the two services continuing together till Ringwood. After departing Ringwood station, the Lilydale line heads north, with the Belgrave line heading in an eastern direction.[35] Almost all of the rail line goes through built-up suburbs, however, the rail line becomes peri-urban towards its terminus in Lilydale.[35]

Stations edit

The line serves 27 stations across 37.8 kilometres (23.5 mi) of track. The stations are a mix of elevated, lowered, underground, and ground level designs. Underground stations are present only in the City Loop and in Box Hill, with the majority of elevated and lowered stations being constructed as part of level crossing removals.[36] From 2025, Ringwood East station will be lowered and Croydon station elevated as part of level crossing removal works.

Station Accessibility Opened Terrain Train connections Other connections
Flinders Street Yes—step free access 1854[37] Lowered    
Southern Cross 1859[37] Ground level        
Flagstaff 1985[37] Underground  
Melbourne Central 1981[37]    
Parliament 1983[37]  
Richmond No—steep ramp 1859[37] Elevated    
East Richmond Yes—step free access 1860[37] Ground level
3 connections
 
Burnley No—steep ramp 1880[37]
Hawthorn 1881[37] Lowered
2 connections
   
Glenferrie 1882[37] Elevated  
Auburn Ground level  
Camberwell Lowered    
East Camberwell 1900[37] Ground level
1 connection
Canterbury 1882[37] Elevated  
Chatham 1927[37] Ground level
Union Yes—step free access 2023[37] Lowered  
Box Hill 1882[37] Underground      
Laburnum 1958[37] Elevated  
Blackburn 1882[37] Ground level
Nunawading 1888[37] Lowered    
Mitcham 1882[37]  
Heatherdale 1958[37]
Ringwood 1882[37] Ground level    
Ringwood East No—steep ramp 1925[37]  
Croydon 1882[37]    
Mooroolbark Yes—step free access 1887[37] Elevated  
Lilydale 1882[37]    
Station histories
Station Opened[38] Closed[38] Age Notes[38]
Parliament 22 January 1983 41 years
Melbourne Central 26 January 1981 43 years
  • Formerly Museum
Flagstaff 27 May 1985 38 years
Southern Cross 17 January 1859 165 years
  • Formerly Batman's Hill
  • Formerly Spencer Street
Flinders Street 12 September 1854 169 years
  • Formerly Melbourne Terminus
Princes Bridge 8 February 1859 1 October 1866 7 years
2 April 1879 30 June 1980 101 years
Botanic Gardens 2 March 1859 c. April 1862 Approx. 3 years
Punt Road 8 February 1859 12 December 1859 10 months
  • Replaced by Swan Street (200m further along line)
Richmond 12 December 1859 164 years
  • Formerly Swan Street
East Richmond 24 September 1860 163 years
  • Formerly Church Street
Burnley 1 May 1880 143 years
  • Formerly Burnley Street
Pic Nic 24 September 1860 6 October 1895 35 years
Hawthorn 13 April 1861 163 years
Glenferrie 3 April 1882 142 years
  • Formerly Glenferrie Road
Auburn 3 April 1882 142 years
  • Formerly Auburn Road
Camberwell 3 April 1882 142 years
East Camberwell 14 May 1900 123 years
Canterbury 1 December 1882 141 years
Chatham 1 April 1927 97 years
Surrey Hills 13 August 1883 17 February 2023 139 years
Union 22 May 2023 11 months
Mont Albert 11 August 1890 17 February 2023 132 years
Box Hill 1 December 1882 141 years
Laburnum 13 July 1958 65 years
Blackburn 25 December 1882 141 years
Nunawading 4 June 1888 135 years
  • Formerly Turnstall
Mitcham 25 December 1882 141 years
Heatherdale 7 September 1958 65 years
Ringwood 1 December 1882 141 years
Ringwood East 18 May 1925 98 years
Croydon 1 December 1882 141 years
  • Formerly Warrandyte
Mooroolbark 10 October 1887 136 years
Cave Hill ? ?
Lilydale 1 December 1882 141 years

Infrastructure edit

Rolling stock edit

 
An X'Trapolis 100 train preparing to departing from Platform 2 at Box Hill station.

The Lilydale line uses X'Trapolis 100 electric multiple unit (EMU) trains operating in a two three-car configuration, with three doors per side on each carriage and can accommodate up to 432 seated passengers in each six car configuration.[39] The trains were originally built between 2002 and 2004, as well as between 2009 and 2020 with a total of 212 three-car sets constructed. The trains are shared with seven other metropolitan train lines and have been in service since 2003.[39]

Alongside the passenger trains, Lilydale line tracks and equipment are maintained by a fleet of engineering trains. The four types of engineering trains are: the shunting train; designed for moving trains along non-electrified corridors and for transporting other maintenance locomotives, for track evaluation; designed for evaluating track and its condition, the overhead inspection train; designed for overhead wiring inspection, and the infrastructure evaluation carriage designed for general infrastructure evaluation.[40] Most of these trains are repurposed locomotives previously used by V/Line, Metro Trains, and the Southern Shorthaul Railroad.[40]

Accessibility edit

 
The rebuilt Lilydale station features tactile boarding indicators and elevators

All stations that are new or rebuilt are fully accessible.[41] Projects improving station accessibility have included the Level Crossing Removal Project, which involves station rebuilds and upgrades, and individual station upgrade projects.[42][43] These works have made significant strides in improving network accessibility, with more than 59% of Lilydale line stations classified as fully accessible.

Signalling edit

The Lilydale line employs a combination of three-position signaling alongside automatic block signaling (ABS) and automatic track control (ATC) safeworking systems, wherein the former involves different signal 'blocks', while the latter encompass a variety of mechanisms for enhancing safety and control on the track.[44] Three-position signalling was first introduced on the line in 1919, with the final section of the line converted to the new type of signalling by 1985.[45] Automatic and track controls are used with the centre line between Burnley and Box Hill, and between Mooroolbark and the line's terminus in Lilydale.

References edit

  1. ^ "Lilydale Line". Public Transport Victoria. from the original on 7 September 2018. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  2. ^ "Metro's paper timetables mess". Daniel Bowen. 3 September 2017. from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  3. ^ a b . 1 March 2021. Archived from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  4. ^ Carey, Adam (7 November 2014). "Trains are working better but seating not guaranteed". The Sydney Morning Herald. from the original on 6 February 2023. Retrieved 6 February 2023.
  5. ^ a b Victoria’s Big Build (13 June 2022). "Goodbye Scoresby Road level crossing". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  6. ^ "OPENING OF THE LILLYDALE RAILWAY". Leader (Melbourne, Vic. : 1862 – 1918, 1935). 9 December 1882. p. 16. Retrieved 29 August 2020.
  7. ^ "DUPLICATION OF BOX HILL RAILWAY". Camberwell and Hawthorn Advertiser. 12 September 1914. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  8. ^ a b c "LILYDALE RAILWAY ELECTRIFICATION". Lilydale Express. 9 October 1925. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Croydon-Mooroolbark Rail Duplication Scheme Ridiculous". Lilydale Express. 5 August 1955. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  10. ^ "ELECTRIFICATION". Argus. 21 November 1912. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  11. ^ "DUPLICATION OF LINES". Argus. 31 March 1911. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  12. ^ "ELECTRIC RAILWAYS". Herald. 11 April 1911. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  13. ^ "Traffic". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. August 1981. p. 185.
  14. ^ Moynihan, Stephen (3 March 2007). "No more Zone 3 lifts load on commuters". The Age. from the original on 29 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  15. ^ "Bye Bye Ringwood Level Crossings | Premier of Victoria". www.premier.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  16. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (21 June 2022). "Mountain Highway, Bayswater". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  17. ^ a b "The level crossings at Blackburn Road and Heatherdale Road are now gone. | Premier of Victoria". www.premier.vic.gov.au. from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  18. ^ "Maroondah Highway, Lilydale | Level Crossing Removal Project". levelcrossings.vic.gov.au. from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  19. ^ "Manchester Road, Mooroolbark | Level Crossing Removal Project". levelcrossings.vic.gov.au. from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  20. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (2 February 2023). "Union Road, Surrey Hills". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 18 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  21. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (22 June 2022). "Final designs for the new Union Station and precinct". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  22. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (20 February 2023). "Dublin Road, Ringwood East". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  23. ^ Build, Victoria’s Big (8 August 2022). "Coolstore Road, Croydon community update – August 2022". Victoria’s Big Build. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  24. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (3 March 2023). "Coolstore Road, Croydon". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  25. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (21 June 2022). "Cave Hill Road, Lilydale". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  26. ^ a b "Network development plan" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 13 April 2019. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  27. ^ "Lilydale Line". Public Transport Victoria. from the original on 7 September 2018. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  28. ^ "Melbourne Weekend Night Network Train Map" (PDF). 2022. (PDF) from the original on 12 January 2023. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  29. ^ "Where do train replacement buses come from?". ABC News. 15 November 2016. from the original on 14 December 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  30. ^ "Lilydale Line". Public Transport Victoria. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  31. ^ "Melbourne's Rail Network to be Split" Railway Digest November 1997 page 12
  32. ^ Cooper, Mex (25 June 2009). "New train, tram operators for Melbourne". The Age. from the original on 1 January 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  33. ^ Carey, Adam (4 June 2015). "Multimillion-dollar Richmond railway station revamp in limbo". The Age. from the original on 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  34. ^ Wong, Marcus (10 May 2021). "Level crossing removals in 1920s Melbourne". Waking up in Geelong. from the original on 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  35. ^ a b Wray, Tyson. "Melbourne's train lines definitively ranked from best to worst". Time Out Melbourne. from the original on 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  36. ^ Lee, Robert S. (2007). The railways of Victoria 1854–2004. Rosemary Annable, Donald S. Garden. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN 978-0-522-85134-2. OCLC 224727085. from the original on 8 May 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "What year did your railway station open? | Public Transport Users Association (Victoria, Australia)". from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  38. ^ a b c Anderson, Rick (2010). Stopping All Stations. Clunes, Victoria: Full Parallel Productions. ISBN 978-0646543635. OCLC 671303814.
  39. ^ a b (PDF). 1 March 2014. Archived from the original on 1 March 2014. Retrieved 17 February 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  40. ^ a b . 1 February 2011. Archived from the original on 7 March 2011.
  41. ^ "Accessibility – Public Transport Ombudsman Victoria". www.ptovic.com.au. from the original on 3 January 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  42. ^ "Left behind: the fight for accessible public transport in Victoria". the Guardian. 12 June 2022. from the original on 3 January 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  43. ^ Victoria’s Big Build (17 October 2022). "Urban design framework". Victoria’s Big Build. from the original on 3 January 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  44. ^ "MOOROOLBARK TO LILYDALE SINGALLING DIAGRAM No. 73/21" (PDF). Metro Trains. 11 November 2021.
  45. ^ "National Code 3-Position Speed Signalling" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 7 February 2023. Retrieved 17 February 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Fiddian, Marc (1988). Commuters, Shoppers and Scholars – A History of the Melbourne – Lilydale Railway. Pakenham Gazette. ISBN 0-9596316-7-4.

External links edit

  • Lilydale line timetable
  • Network maps
  •   Media related to Lilydale railway line at Wikimedia Commons

lilydale, line, commuter, railway, line, city, melbourne, victoria, australia, operated, metro, trains, melbourne, city, sixth, longest, metropolitan, railway, line, kilometres, line, runs, from, flinders, street, station, central, melbourne, lilydale, station. The Lilydale line is a commuter railway line in the city of Melbourne Victoria Australia 1 Operated by Metro Trains Melbourne it is the city s sixth longest metropolitan railway line at 37 8 kilometres 23 5 mi The line runs from Flinders Street station in central Melbourne to Lilydale station in the east serving 27 stations via Burnley Box Hill Ringwood and Croydon 2 The line operates for approximately 19 hours a day from approximately 5 00 am to around 12 00 am with 24 hour service available on Friday and Saturday nights During peak hours headways of up to 15 minutes are operated with services every 20 30 minutes during off peak hours 3 Trains on the Lilydale line run in two three car formations of X Trapolis 100 trainsets 4 Lilydale lineX Trapolis train at the platform of Lilydale station the terminus of the Lilydale line OverviewService typeCommuter railSystemMelbourne railway networkStatusOperationalLocaleMelbourne Victoria AustraliaFirst service1 December 1882 141 years ago 1882 12 01 Current operator s Metro TrainsFormer operator s Victorian Railways VR 1882 1974 VR as VicRail 1974 1983 MTA The Met 1983 1989 PTC The Met 1989 1998 Hillside Trains 1998 2000 Connex Melbourne 2000 2009 WebsiteOfficial websiteRouteTerminiFlinders StreetLilydaleStops27 including City Loop stations Distance travelled37 8 km 23 5 mi Average journey time59 minutes not via City Loop Service frequency6 20 minutes weekdays peak30 minutes weekdays off peak20 minutes weekend daytime30 minutes nights60 minutes early weekend morningsDouble frequency between Flinders Street and Ringwood in combination with Belgrave lineExtra services run between Flinders Street and either Blackburn or Ringwood on weekdaysTechnicalRolling stockX Trapolis 100Track gauge1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in Electrification1500 V DC overheadTrack owner s VicTrackRoute mapLegend h mm km zone 1 2 Southern Cross 1 1 3 Flagstaff 1 9 Melbourne Central 3 0 Parliament 0 00 0 0 Flinders Street 0 03 2 6 Richmond 0 05 3 1 East Richmond 0 07 4 1 Burnley 0 09 5 7 Hawthorn 0 11 6 9 Glenferrie 0 13 7 7 Auburn 0 15 9 0 Camberwell 0 17 9 8 East Camberwell 1 0 19 11 0 Canterbury 1 2 0 21 11 7 Chatham 0 23 12 9 Union 1 2 0 27 14 9 Box Hill 2 0 29 16 6 Laburnum 0 31 17 4 Blackburn 0 34 19 5 Nunawading 0 36 21 2 Mitcham 0 39 23 2 Heatherdale 0 42 24 5 Ringwood 0 44 26 6 Ringwood East 0 48 29 8 Croydon 0 53 33 2 Mooroolbark 0 59 37 6 Lilydale 2 h mm km zone This diagram viewtalkedit Sections of the Lilydale line opened as early as 1859 with the line fully extended to Lilydale by 1882 The line was built to connect Melbourne and Ringwood with the rural towns of Croydon Mooroolbark and Lilydale among others Since the 2010s due to the heavily utilised infrastructure of the Lilydale line significant improvements and upgrades have been made Different packages of work have upgraded the corridor to replace sleepers upgrade signalling technology introduce new rolling stock and remove remaining level crossings 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 2 20th century 1 3 21st century 2 Future 2 1 Level Crossing Removals 2 2 Duplication 3 Network and operations 3 1 Services 3 1 1 Stopping patterns 3 2 Operators 3 3 Route 3 4 Stations 4 Infrastructure 4 1 Rolling stock 4 2 Accessibility 4 3 Signalling 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory edit19th century edit The line from Richmond to Hawthorn was opened initially to a temporary terminus at Pic Nic just short of the Yarra River in September 1860 and to Hawthorn in April 1861 It was extended to Camberwell in April 1882 then to Lilydale in early December of that same year 6 Duplication from East Richmond to Hawthorn occurred less than a month after the Lilydale extension opened Soon after the same section was converted to double line telegraph safeworking with the section from Hawthorn to Camberwell being converted to Staff and Ticket working In May 1885 Hawthorn to Camberwell was duplicated Duplication was extended to Box Hill in December 1888 7 20th century edit Automatic signalling was introduced in December 1907 with the conversion of the section from East Richmond to Hawthorn to semi automatic signalling followed by Richmond to East Richmond being converted to automatic signalling in August 1919 8 East Richmond to Camberwell was converted in two stages both in October 1922 and Camberwell to Canterbury the following month 8 Electrification occurred between Flinders Street and Box Hill in December 1922 and extended to Ringwood the following month then to Croydon in November 1925 and to Lilydale in October 1925 8 Conversion to automatic signalling resumed in April 1927 with the conversion of Canterbury to Surrey Hills followed by Surrey Hills to Box Hill in October 1929 The section from Croydon to Mooroolbark was duplicated in 1957 creating a long passing loop on this otherwise single line section beyond Ringwood 9 The section from Mooroolbark to Lilydale remains a single track Automatic signalling conversions resumed in July 1958 with the section from Box Hill to Blackburn followed by Mitcham to Ringwood in September of that year and Blackburn to Mitcham in November 1960 10 Hawthorn to Camberwell was triplicated in December 1963 and the triplication was extended to East Camberwell in November 1964 11 Richmond to Burnley was quadruplicated in 1966 67 and triplication was extended to Box Hill in December 1971 followed by Burnley to Hawthorn in August 1972 12 This left a short section of double track on the upside of Richmond but this was quadruplicated with the construction of a flyover in 1973 Ringwood to Croydon was converted to automatic signalling in November 1973 and duplicated in June 1984 Mooroolbark to Lilydale was converted to automatic signalling in June 1985 The new Comeng trains were introduced to the Melbourne railway system in 1981 Initially along with the Lilydale line they were only allowed to operate on the Alamein Belgrave Dandenong and Glen Waverley lines due to the width of the trains 3 05 metres 10 ft 0 in 13 The Comeng trains were introduced with the intention of replacing the last of the Tait sets and the majority of the Harris sets 21st century edit Main article Lilydale railway line FutureA 2007 restructure of train ticketing in Melbourne involved the removal of Zone 3 with Zone 3 stations being re classified to Zone 2 14 This brought the cost of train fares down improving system accessibility to the public Future editLevel Crossing Removals edit nbsp The level crossing at Maroondah Highway Lilydale prior to its 2021 removal The Level Crossing Removal Project has announced the removal of all nine remaining level crossings on the Lilydale line to be completed in stages from 2016 to 2025 15 In 2016 two level crossings were removed at Mountain Highway and Scoresby Road Bayswater through the rail under road method 5 These two removals also included a rebuilt Bayswater station and upgraded stabling facilities 16 A further two crossings were removed at Blackburn Road Blackburn and Heatherdale Road Ringwood in January 2017 17 Both of these removals involved lowering the rail line under the roads with a rebuilt Heatherdale station built as part of the project 17 In 2021 an additional two level crossings were removed at Manchester Rd Mooroolbark and Maroondah Highway Lilydale 18 These two removals included two new elevated stations at Mooroolbark and Lilydale 19 Union and Mont Albert Roads have also been removed by lowering the rail line in May 2023 20 The removals also included closing Mont Albert and Surrey Hills stations with a new station built in between called Union 21 The final two crossings to be removed will include lowering the rail line below Dublin Road in Ringwood East with a new Ringwood East station to be completed in 2025 22 and a rail bridge above Coolstore Road in Croydon with a new Croydon station by 2025 23 The Coolstore Road level crossing removal will also include a newly elevated Croydon station 24 In addition the level crossing at Cave Hill Road in Lilydale will be permanently closed by 2025 25 Duplication edit The Network Development Plan Metropolitan Rail released in 2012 highlighted future upgrades for the rail corridor between Mooroolbark and Lilydale The development plan highlighted the need for the track to be duplicated between Moroolbark and Lilydale as well as the construction of a new train maintenance facility in the Lilydale area within the next 20 years by 2032 26 However this project has not remained on the planning agenda despite the significant work conducted by the Level Crossing Removal Project in the area which has previously undertaken duplication works Network and operations editServices edit Services on the Lilydale line operate from approximately 5 00 am to around 12 00 daily 27 In general during peak hours train frequency is 7 minutes on the Ringwood corridor combined with the Belgrave line and 10 20 minutes in the AM peak on the Lilydale line while during non peak hours the frequency is reduced to 20 30 minutes throughout the entire route 3 On Friday nights and weekends services run 24 hours a day with 60 minute frequencies available outside of normal operating hours 28 Train services on the Lilydale line are also subjected to maintenance and renewal work usually on selected Fridays and Saturdays Shuttle bus services are provided throughout the duration of work for affected commuters 29 Stopping patterns edit Legend Station status Premium Station Station staffed from first to last train Host Station Usually staffed during the morning peak however this can vary for different stations on the network Legend Stopping patternsSome services do not operate via the City Loop All trains stop Some services do not stop Trains pass and do not stop Lilydale Services 30 Station Zone Local Ltd Express Blackburn Ringwood Mooroolbark Shuttle Flinders Street 1 Southern Cross Flagstaff Melbourne Central Parliament Richmond East Richmond Burnley Hawthorn Glenferrie Auburn Camberwell East Camberwell Canterbury 1 2 Chatham Union Box Hill 2 Laburnum Blackburn Nunawading Mitcham Heatherdale Ringwood Ringwood East Croydon Mooroolbark Lilydale Operators edit The Lilydale line has had a total of six operators since its opening in 1882 The majority of operations throughout its history have been government run from its first service in 1882 until the 1999 privatisation of Melbourne s rail network four different government operators have run the line 31 These operators Victorian Railways the Metropolitan Transit Authority the Public Transport Corporation and Hillside Trains have a combined operational length of 117 years Hillside Trains was privatised in August 1999 and later rebranded as Connex Melbourne Metro Trains Melbourne the current private operator then took over the operations in 2009 Both private operators have had a combined operational period of 24 years 32 Past and present operators of the Lilydale line Operator Assumed operations Ceased operations Length of operations Victorian Railways 1882 1983 101 years Metropolitan Transit Authority 1983 1989 6 years Public Transport Corporation 1989 1998 9 years Hillside Trains government operator 1998 1999 1 years Connex Melbourne 1999 2009 10 years Metro Trains Melbourne 2009 incumbent 14 years ongoing Route edit vteLilydale line Legend km zone nbsp nbsp Multiple linesvia North Melbourne nbsp nbsp City Loop nbsp nbsp 1 2 Southern Cross nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp 2 5 Flagstaff nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp 3 1 Melbourne Central nbsp nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp 4 3 Parliament nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp 0 0 Flinders Street nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp 0 1 Princes Bridge closed nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Hurstbridge amp Mernda linesto Jolimont nbsp nbsp City Loop nbsp 1 8 Botanic Gardens closed nbsp 2 3 Punt Road Hoddle Highway nbsp 2 6 Richmond nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp Cranbourne Frankston Pakenham amp Sandringham linesto South Yarra nbsp 3 1 East Richmond 1 nbsp 4 1 Burnley 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp Glen Waverley lineto Glen Waverley nbsp 4 9 Pic Nic demolished nbsp 5 0 Yarra River nbsp 5 7 Hawthorn nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp Kew lineto Kew dismantled nbsp 6 9 Glenferrie 1 nbsp 7 7 Auburn nbsp 1 nbsp 9 0 Camberwell nbsp 1 nbsp nbsp Alamein lineto Alamein nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 8 East Camberwell 1 nbsp nbsp Outer Circle lineto Fairfield closed nbsp 11 0 Canterbury nbsp 1 2 nbsp 11 7 Chatham 1 2 nbsp 12 6 Surrey Hills demolished nbsp 12 9 Union nbsp 1 2 nbsp 13 4 Mont Albert demolished nbsp 14 9 Box Hill nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp 16 6 Laburnum nbsp 2 nbsp 17 4 Blackburn nbsp 2 nbsp 19 5 Nunawading nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp 19 7 Springvale Road State Highway nbsp 21 2 Mitcham nbsp 2 nbsp 23 2 Heatherdale nbsp 2 nbsp 23 4 EastLink nbsp 24 5 Ringwood nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp Belgrave lineto Belgrave nbsp 26 6 Ringwood East nbsp 2 nbsp 29 8 Croydon nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp 30 5 Creek nbsp 32 7 Brushy Creek nbsp 33 2 Mooroolbark nbsp 2 nbsp 33 3 Creek nbsp 33 4 Creek nbsp 36 8 Cave Hill closed nbsp 37 6 Lilydale nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp 37 7 Maroondah Highway nbsp nbsp 38 4 End of Metro area nbsp Olinda Creek nbsp nbsp nbsp Warburton line closed nbsp nbsp Healesville line closed nbsp Interactive map of the Lilydale line in eastern Melbourne Lilydale physical track OverviewStatusOperational with passenger services from Flinders Street to LilydaleOwnerVictorian Railways VR 1882 1974 VR as VicRail 1974 1983 MTA The Met 1983 1989 PTC The Met 1989 1997 VicTrack 1997 Current LocaleMelbourne Victoria AustraliaTerminiFlinders StreetLilydaleContinues asHealesvilleWarburtonConnecting linesAll metropolitan regional and interstateFormer connectionsHealesville Kew Outer Circle WarburtonStations26 current stations1 under construction5 former stations1 former sidingServiceServicesLilydaleHistoryCommenced1 December 1882 1882 12 01 OpenedPrinces Bridge to Richmond on 8 February 1859 1859 02 08 To Pic nic on 24 September 1860 1860 09 24 To Hawthorn on 13 April 1861 1861 04 13 Flinders Street to Princes Bridge on 18 December 1865 1865 12 18 To Camberwell on 3 April 1882 1882 04 03 To Lilydale on 1 December 1882 1882 12 01 Completed1 December 1882 1882 12 01 ElectrifiedFlinders Street to Box Hill on 19 December 1922 1922 12 19 To Ringwood on 30 January 1923 1923 01 30 To Croydon on 28 November 1924 1924 11 28 To Lilydale on 30 November 1925 1925 11 30 TechnicalLine length37 8 km 23 49 mi Number of tracksTwelve tracks Flinders Street to Richmond Four tracks Richmond to Burnley Triple track Burnley to Box Hill Double track Box Hill to Mooroolbark Single track Mooroolbark to LilydaleTrack gauge1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in Electrification1500 V DC overheadOperating speed80 km h 50 mph ElectricSignallingAutomatic block signalingMaximum incline1 in 40 2 5 The Lilydale line forms a curved route from the Melbourne central business district to its terminus in Lilydale The route is 37 8 kilometres 23 5 mi long and predominantly double tracked however between Flinders Street station and Richmond the track widens to 12 tracks narrowing to four tracks between Richmond and Burnley before narrowing to 3 tracks between Burnley and Box Hill Finally the line narrows to two tracks between Box Hill and Mooroolbark before narrowing to a single track to its terminus 33 26 After Mooroolbark passing loops and island platforms are present throughout the remaining track to allow trains to pass Sections of the line have been elevated or lowered into a cutting to eliminate level crossings 34 The line follows the same alignment as the Alamein Belgrave and Glen Waverley lines with the four services splitting onto different routes at Burnley The Alamein Belgrave and Lilydale services continue till the Alamein line splits off at Camberwell with the two services continuing together till Ringwood After departing Ringwood station the Lilydale line heads north with the Belgrave line heading in an eastern direction 35 Almost all of the rail line goes through built up suburbs however the rail line becomes peri urban towards its terminus in Lilydale 35 Stations edit The line serves 27 stations across 37 8 kilometres 23 5 mi of track The stations are a mix of elevated lowered underground and ground level designs Underground stations are present only in the City Loop and in Box Hill with the majority of elevated and lowered stations being constructed as part of level crossing removals 36 From 2025 Ringwood East station will be lowered and Croydon station elevated as part of level crossing removal works Station Accessibility Opened Terrain Train connections Other connections Flinders Street Yes step free access 1854 37 Lowered 16 connections Alamein line Belgrave line Craigieburn line Cranbourne line Flemington Racecourse line Frankston line Gippsland line Glen Waverley line Hurstbridge line Mernda line Pakenham line Sandringham line Sunbury line Upfield line Werribee line Williamstown line nbsp nbsp Southern Cross 1859 37 Ground level 27 connections Alamein line Albury line Ararat line Ballarat line Belgrave line Bendigo line Craigieburn line Cranbourne line Echuca line Flemington Racecourse line Geelong line Gippsland line Glen Waverley line Hurstbridge line Maryborough line Mernda line NSW TrainLink Southern Pakenham line Seymour line Shepparton line Sunbury line Swan Hill line The Overland Upfield line Warrnambool line Werribee line Williamstown line nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Flagstaff 1985 37 Underground 10 connections Alamein line Belgrave line Craigieburn line Cranbourne line Glen Waverley line Hurstbridge line Mernda line Pakenham line Sunbury line Upfield line nbsp Melbourne Central 1981 37 nbsp nbsp Parliament 1983 37 nbsp Richmond No steep ramp 1859 37 Elevated 8 connections Alamein line Belgrave line Cranbourne line Frankston line Gippsland line Glen Waverley line Pakenham line Sandringham line nbsp nbsp East Richmond Yes step free access 1860 37 Ground level 3 connections Alamein line Belgrave line Glen Waverley line nbsp Burnley No steep ramp 1880 37 Hawthorn 1881 37 Lowered 2 connections Alamein line Belgrave line nbsp nbsp Glenferrie 1882 37 Elevated nbsp Auburn Ground level nbsp Camberwell Lowered nbsp nbsp East Camberwell 1900 37 Ground level 1 connection Belgrave line Canterbury 1882 37 Elevated nbsp Chatham 1927 37 Ground level Union Yes step free access 2023 37 Lowered nbsp Box Hill 1882 37 Underground nbsp nbsp nbsp Laburnum 1958 37 Elevated nbsp Blackburn 1882 37 Ground level Nunawading 1888 37 Lowered nbsp nbsp Mitcham 1882 37 nbsp Heatherdale 1958 37 Ringwood 1882 37 Ground level nbsp nbsp Ringwood East No steep ramp 1925 37 nbsp Croydon 1882 37 nbsp nbsp Mooroolbark Yes step free access 1887 37 Elevated nbsp Lilydale 1882 37 nbsp nbsp Station histories Station Opened 38 Closed 38 Age Notes 38 Parliament 22 January 1983 41 years Melbourne Central 26 January 1981 43 years Formerly Museum Flagstaff 27 May 1985 38 years Southern Cross 17 January 1859 165 years Formerly Batman s Hill Formerly Spencer Street Flinders Street 12 September 1854 169 years Formerly Melbourne Terminus Princes Bridge 8 February 1859 1 October 1866 7 years 2 April 1879 30 June 1980 101 years Botanic Gardens 2 March 1859 c April 1862 Approx 3 years Punt Road 8 February 1859 12 December 1859 10 months Replaced by Swan Street 200m further along line Richmond 12 December 1859 164 years Formerly Swan Street East Richmond 24 September 1860 163 years Formerly Church Street Burnley 1 May 1880 143 years Formerly Burnley Street Pic Nic 24 September 1860 6 October 1895 35 years Hawthorn 13 April 1861 163 years Glenferrie 3 April 1882 142 years Formerly Glenferrie Road Auburn 3 April 1882 142 years Formerly Auburn Road Camberwell 3 April 1882 142 years East Camberwell 14 May 1900 123 years Canterbury 1 December 1882 141 years Chatham 1 April 1927 97 years Surrey Hills 13 August 1883 17 February 2023 139 years Union 22 May 2023 11 months Mont Albert 11 August 1890 17 February 2023 132 years Box Hill 1 December 1882 141 years Laburnum 13 July 1958 65 years Blackburn 25 December 1882 141 years Nunawading 4 June 1888 135 years Formerly Turnstall Mitcham 25 December 1882 141 years Heatherdale 7 September 1958 65 years Ringwood 1 December 1882 141 years Ringwood East 18 May 1925 98 years Croydon 1 December 1882 141 years Formerly Warrandyte Mooroolbark 10 October 1887 136 years Cave Hill Lilydale 1 December 1882 141 yearsInfrastructure editRolling stock edit nbsp An X Trapolis 100 train preparing to departing from Platform 2 at Box Hill station The Lilydale line uses X Trapolis 100 electric multiple unit EMU trains operating in a two three car configuration with three doors per side on each carriage and can accommodate up to 432 seated passengers in each six car configuration 39 The trains were originally built between 2002 and 2004 as well as between 2009 and 2020 with a total of 212 three car sets constructed The trains are shared with seven other metropolitan train lines and have been in service since 2003 39 Alongside the passenger trains Lilydale line tracks and equipment are maintained by a fleet of engineering trains The four types of engineering trains are the shunting train designed for moving trains along non electrified corridors and for transporting other maintenance locomotives for track evaluation designed for evaluating track and its condition the overhead inspection train designed for overhead wiring inspection and the infrastructure evaluation carriage designed for general infrastructure evaluation 40 Most of these trains are repurposed locomotives previously used by V Line Metro Trains and the Southern Shorthaul Railroad 40 Accessibility edit nbsp The rebuilt Lilydale station features tactile boarding indicators and elevators All stations that are new or rebuilt are fully accessible 41 Projects improving station accessibility have included the Level Crossing Removal Project which involves station rebuilds and upgrades and individual station upgrade projects 42 43 These works have made significant strides in improving network accessibility with more than 59 of Lilydale line stations classified as fully accessible Signalling edit The Lilydale line employs a combination of three position signaling alongside automatic block signaling ABS and automatic track control ATC safeworking systems wherein the former involves different signal blocks while the latter encompass a variety of mechanisms for enhancing safety and control on the track 44 Three position signalling was first introduced on the line in 1919 with the final section of the line converted to the new type of signalling by 1985 45 Automatic and track controls are used with the centre line between Burnley and Box Hill and between Mooroolbark and the line s terminus in Lilydale References edit Lilydale Line Public Transport Victoria Archived from the original on 7 September 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Metro s paper timetables mess Daniel Bowen 3 September 2017 Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 9 December 2022 a b New timetable train line information Public Transport Victoria 1 March 2021 Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2022 Carey Adam 7 November 2014 Trains are working better but seating not guaranteed The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 6 February 2023 Retrieved 6 February 2023 a b Victoria s Big Build 13 June 2022 Goodbye Scoresby Road level crossing Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 24 February 2023 Retrieved 24 February 2023 OPENING OF THE LILLYDALE RAILWAY Leader Melbourne Vic 1862 1918 1935 9 December 1882 p 16 Retrieved 29 August 2020 DUPLICATION OF BOX HILL RAILWAY Camberwell and Hawthorn Advertiser 12 September 1914 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 13 March 2023 a b c LILYDALE RAILWAY ELECTRIFICATION Lilydale Express 9 October 1925 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Croydon Mooroolbark Rail Duplication Scheme Ridiculous Lilydale Express 5 August 1955 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 ELECTRIFICATION Argus 21 November 1912 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 DUPLICATION OF LINES Argus 31 March 1911 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 ELECTRIC RAILWAYS Herald 11 April 1911 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Traffic Newsrail Australian Railway Historical Society August 1981 p 185 Moynihan Stephen 3 March 2007 No more Zone 3 lifts load on commuters The Age Archived from the original on 29 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Bye Bye Ringwood Level Crossings Premier of Victoria www premier vic gov au Retrieved 5 August 2023 Victoria s Big Build 21 June 2022 Mountain Highway Bayswater Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 24 February 2023 Retrieved 24 February 2023 a b The level crossings at Blackburn Road and Heatherdale Road are now gone Premier of Victoria www premier vic gov au Archived from the original on 24 February 2023 Retrieved 24 February 2023 Maroondah Highway Lilydale Level Crossing Removal Project levelcrossings vic gov au Archived from the original on 25 April 2019 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Manchester Road Mooroolbark Level Crossing Removal Project levelcrossings vic gov au Archived from the original on 25 April 2019 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Victoria s Big Build 2 February 2023 Union Road Surrey Hills Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 18 February 2023 Retrieved 24 February 2023 Victoria s Big Build 22 June 2022 Final designs for the new Union Station and precinct Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 24 February 2023 Retrieved 24 February 2023 Victoria s Big Build 20 February 2023 Dublin Road Ringwood East Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2023 Build Victoria s Big 8 August 2022 Coolstore Road Croydon community update August 2022 Victoria s Big Build Retrieved 22 January 2024 Victoria s Big Build 3 March 2023 Coolstore Road Croydon Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2023 Victoria s Big Build 21 June 2022 Cave Hill Road Lilydale Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b Network development plan PDF Archived PDF from the original on 13 April 2019 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Lilydale Line Public Transport Victoria Archived from the original on 7 September 2018 Retrieved 16 March 2023 Melbourne Weekend Night Network Train Map PDF 2022 Archived PDF from the original on 12 January 2023 Retrieved 18 December 2022 Where do train replacement buses come from ABC News 15 November 2016 Archived from the original on 14 December 2022 Retrieved 18 December 2022 Lilydale Line Public Transport Victoria Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Melbourne s Rail Network to be Split Railway Digest November 1997 page 12 Cooper Mex 25 June 2009 New train tram operators for Melbourne The Age Archived from the original on 1 January 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Carey Adam 4 June 2015 Multimillion dollar Richmond railway station revamp in limbo The Age Archived from the original on 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Wong Marcus 10 May 2021 Level crossing removals in 1920s Melbourne Waking up in Geelong Archived from the original on 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 a b Wray Tyson Melbourne s train lines definitively ranked from best to worst Time Out Melbourne Archived from the original on 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Lee Robert S 2007 The railways of Victoria 1854 2004 Rosemary Annable Donald S Garden Carlton Vic Melbourne University Publishing ISBN 978 0 522 85134 2 OCLC 224727085 Archived from the original on 8 May 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y What year did your railway station open Public Transport Users Association Victoria Australia Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 9 December 2022 a b c Anderson Rick 2010 Stopping All Stations Clunes Victoria Full Parallel Productions ISBN 978 0646543635 OCLC 671303814 a b Train Franchise Agreement Vol 2 of 2 PDF 1 March 2014 Archived from the original on 1 March 2014 Retrieved 17 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b NETWORK SERVICE PLAN Addenda 1 February 2011 Archived from the original on 7 March 2011 Accessibility Public Transport Ombudsman Victoria www ptovic com au Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Left behind the fight for accessible public transport in Victoria the Guardian 12 June 2022 Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Victoria s Big Build 17 October 2022 Urban design framework Victoria s Big Build Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 MOOROOLBARK TO LILYDALE SINGALLING DIAGRAM No 73 21 PDF Metro Trains 11 November 2021 National Code 3 Position Speed Signalling PDF Archived PDF from the original on 7 February 2023 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Further reading editFiddian Marc 1988 Commuters Shoppers and Scholars A History of the Melbourne Lilydale Railway Pakenham Gazette ISBN 0 9596316 7 4 External links editLilydale line timetable Network maps nbsp Media related to Lilydale railway line at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp Victoria nbsp Trains nbsp Transport Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lilydale line amp oldid 1197860073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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