Adelaide Parklands Terminal Explained

Adelaide Parklands Terminal
Address:Richmond Road, Keswick Terminal
Coordinates:-34.9381°N 138.5811°W
Line:


Structure:Ground
Platform:3 (1 side, 1 island)
Tracks:3
Parking:Yes
Opened:18 May 1984
Owned:Journey Beyond
Operator:Journey Beyond

Adelaide Parklands Terminal, formerly known as Keswick Terminal, is the interstate passenger railway station in Adelaide, South Australia. It is the only station in the world where passengers can board trains on both north–south and east–west transcontinental routes.[1] [2] [3] [4]

The terminal is north of the suburb of Keswick, 3km (02miles) by road south-west of the city centre, and adjoins the south-western sector of the West Parklands. It was within the boundary of Keswick until 1987 when, inclusive of adjacent business sites and covering a total area of 56.6abbr=offNaNabbr=off, Keswick Terminal was declared a suburb in its own right.[5]

History

The terminal opened on 18 May 1984 as Keswick Terminal (and located near, but not connected to, the now demolished Keswick station). It was developed by Australian National (AN) as a dedicated long-haul passenger rail station, allowing AN to vacate the then State Transport Authority's Adelaide railway station. It was included in the sale of Australian National's passenger operations to Great Southern Rail in 1997.[6]

In June 2008, the station was renamed Adelaide Parklands Terminal[7] following Stage One of a plan to "improve guest comfort and amenity, traffic and passenger movement, food and retail facilities, image, identity, presentation and sustainability".[8]

Services

The terminal was built by Australian National as a dual gauge station for The Ghan, Indian Pacific and Trans-Australian to the north and The Overland to the south-east – the latter train being on broad-gauge tracks at the time, before conversion to in 1995.[9] It was also served by regional South Australian trains – also operated by Australian National – until all passenger trains outside of Greater Adelaide had ceased operation by 1990.

Since 1991, the only trains regularly operating out of the terminal have been The Ghan, Indian Pacific and The Overland; The Southern Spirit ran seasonally between 2010 and 2012, and the Great Southern commenced seasonal services in 2020. Today, these trains are operated by Journey Beyond.

Visiting passenger trains from interstate also visit the terminal, albeit rarely.

Local transport

Although three suburban rail lines run parallel to the terminal, the nearest suburban railway station is 700m (2,300feet) to the south. The nearest bus stop is 450m (1,480feet) away, also to the south.

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://journeybeyondrail.com.au/guest-information/fares-and-timetables/the-ghan-expedition-2021-fares-timetable/ Ghan Timetable April to December 2021
  2. https://journeybeyondrail.com.au/guest-information/fares-and-timetables/the-overland-2021-fares-timetable/ The Overland Timetable 3 January 2021
  3. Web site: Great Southern 2022 Fares & Timetables. 2021-11-03. Journey Beyond Rail Expeditions. en-AU.
  4. Web site: The new Great Southern train service links Adelaide and Brisbane . Dennis . Anthony . 10 February 2020 . Traveller . 1 June 2022.
  5. Web site: Keswick Terminal, 5035 . . 2022 . Plan SA . . 19 July 2022.
  6. "Goodbye AN Passenger, Hello Great Southern Railway" Railway Digest December 1997 page 7
  7. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/08/05/2324494.htm New name for interstate rail terminal
  8. http://www.atomiq.com.au/images/DL-Links/ATOMIQ-Adelaide-Master.pdf ATOMIQ Design Group
  9. Web site: ARHS Railway Museum: History 1950 – now . railwaymuseum.org.au . 2008-03-29 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070208193612/http://www.railwaymuseum.org.au/history3.html . 8 February 2007 .