Daglish railway station explained

Daglish
Style:Transperth
Address:Railway Road and Stubbs Terrace Daglish / Subiaco
Borough:Western Australia
Country:Australia
Coordinates:-31.9518°N 115.8134°W
Distance: from Perth
Platform:1 island platform with 2 platform edges
Tracks:2
Parking:2 car parks, 58 bays total
Opened:14 July 1924
Accessible:Partial
Architectural Style:Federation Bungalow
Owned:Public Transport Authority
Operator:Transperth Train Operations
Zone:1
Passengers:186,725
Pass Year:2013–14
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Caption:Location of Daglish railway station
Mapframe-Zoom:13

Daglish railway station (officially Daglish Station) is a commuter railway station on the boundary of Daglish and Subiaco, suburbs of Perth, Western Australia. Opened on 14 July 1924, the station was named after Henry Daglish, who had been a mayor of Subiaco, a member for the electoral district of Subiaco, and a premier of Western Australia in the 1900s. Daglish was a resident of Subiaco for 22 years before he died in 1920. The station consists of an island platform accessed by a pedestrian underpass. Two small buildings are on the platform which operated as a parcels office and ticket office until 1970. The station is only partially accessible due to a steep access ramp and lack of tactile paving.

Daglish station is on the Fremantle and Airport lines, which are part of the Transperth public transport network. Services on each line run every 12 minutes during peak hour and every 15 minutes outside peak hour and on weekends and public holidays. At night, trains are every half-hour or hour. The journey to Perth station is and takes 7 minutes.

Description

Daglish station is on the boundary of Daglish and Subiaco, suburbs of Perth, Western Australia.[1] Parallel to the south-east is Railway Road and to the north-west is Stubbs Terrace.[2] It is owned by the Public Transport Authority (PTA), a state government agency,[3] and is part of the Transperth system. The station is,[4] or a 7-minute train journey, from Perth station. The adjacent stations are Subiaco station towards Perth or High Wycombe and Shenton Park station towards Fremantle or Claremont.[5] [6]

The station consists of a single island platform with two platform edges. The platform has an asphalt surface with concrete on the edges. It is approximately long, enough for a Transperth four-car train but not a six-car train. Eventually, as part of the PTA's efforts to make all stations compatible with six-car trains, the platform will be lengthened to .[7] At the south-west end of the platform is a pedestrian subway, accessed from the platform by a ramp. On the platform are two small red brick buildings under a single terracotta tiled roof. Between them is an undercover area for seating. The buildings display elements of the Federation Bungalow architectural style. The station building, platform, and underpass are largely the same as when originally built, with the main change being that the doors and windows are bricked in. Surrounding Daglish station is an ornamental garden, including a hedge that spells "DAGLISH". There are car parks on both sides of the station, with a total of 58 bays. The station is listed as an "assisted access" station on the Transperth website, as the access ramp is too steep and there is no tactile paving.

Immediately south-west of the station is a single-ended turnback siding. It was used by trains operating special event services for Subiaco Oval until the stadium was closed in 2017. Trains would park there before heading to West Leederville station to pick up passengers.[8] It will be used by Morley–Ellenbrook line trains when that line opens in 2024. Those trains will not stop at Daglish station or any other station between Daglish and Perth. The turnback has capacity for five trains per hour, so an additional turnback will be needed for that line to achieve six trains per hour, which is planned in 2031.[9] [10]

History

By 1920, the Subiaco community wanted a railway station in the southern part of Subiaco. The Subiaco Municipal Council started lobbying the Government of Western Australia for a station to be built near Lawler Street. In 1922, after many meetings between the premier, the minister for railways, and the mayor of Subiaco, Walter Richardson, the government promised that the station would be built.[11] The station was constructed during 1923 and the first half of 1924,[11] during which time the station was often called Lawler Street station, although the station was actually slightly south of that street.[11] It opened on 14 July 1924,[12] [13] and was named after Henry Daglish, who was a mayor of Subiaco, a member for the electoral district of Subiaco, and a premier of Western Australia in the 1900s. Daglish was a resident of Subiaco for 22 years before he died in 1920.[14] [15]

In 1925, the Municipality of Subiaco acquired the land north-west of the station. Previously planned to be used as a rail yard, the council planned to create a residential suburb there named Daglish.[11] The development of the suburb spanned the following two decades.[11]

Car parks at the station were built in the 1960s, with the Stubbs Terrace car park built around 1966–67 and the Railway Road car park built in 1969. In 1970, the then-operator of the railway network, Western Australian Government Railways, changed the way it handled freight. This meant that from 31 January 1970, the station's parcels office and ticket office no longer operated, and staff no longer worked at the station. The windows and doors to the station building were filled in with bricks, and the building is now occupied by electrical equipment. The station closed on 1 September 1979 along with the rest of the Fremantle line. It re-opened on 29 July 1983 when services on the Fremantle line were restored.[16] [17]

In May 2007, the turnback siding was opened between the mainline tracks south-west of the station, permitting the reversal of six-car trains moving special event crowds to and from Subiaco Oval.[18] Since 10 October 2022, the station has been served by Airport line services in addition to the pre-existing Fremantle line services.[19]

Services

Daglish station is served by the Airport and Fremantle lines on the Transperth network. Services are operated by Transperth Train Operations, a division of the PTA.[20] [21] The Fremantle line runs between Fremantle station and Perth station, continuing past Perth as the Midland line. The Airport line, which commenced regular services on 10 October 2022, goes between High Wycombe station and Claremont station.[22] [23] [24]

Airport line and Fremantle line trains stop at Daglish every 12 minutes each during peak hour for a combined frequency of a train every 6 minutes. Outside peak hour and on weekends and public holidays, each line has a train every 15 minutes for a combined frequency of 7.5 minutes. Late at night, each line has a half-hourly or hourly frequency.[23] [24] Daglish station saw 186,725 passengers in the 2013–14 financial year.[25] In 2015, the station had 644 average weekday boardings, making it the 50th busiest station out of the 69 Transperth stations at the time.[26]

On Railway Road next to the station are a pair of bus stops. These are served by route 27, which runs between East Perth and Claremont station.[27] These are also served by rail replacement bus route 906 when trains are not running.

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: UBD street directory Gregory's 2016 Perth & surrounds. . 2015 . Universal Publishers . 978-0-7319-3006-7.
  2. Web site: Daglish Station – Access Map . https://web.archive.org/web/20210326225525/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/timetablePDFs/BusStationMaps/Daglish%20Station.pdf . 26 March 2021 . live. Transperth . 2 December 2021.
  3. Web site: Public Transport Authority: Railway System: April 2019 . Public Transport Authority . 30 April 2022 . April 2019 . 24 July 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190724085310/https://www.pta.wa.gov.au/Portals/15/AA_DOCUMENTS/Our_system/Freight%20network/PTA%20Rail%20Network%20Map_2019.pdf . live .
  4. Web site: Manual – Rail Access . Public Transport Authority . 30 August 2021 . 20 September 2021 . 21 September 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210921045822/https://www.pta.wa.gov.au/Portals/15/AA_DOCUMENTS/About_us/Working%20with%20PTA/Safety%20resources/8800-400-001%20-%20Rail%20Access%20Manual.pdf . dead. Distance from East Perth station to Perth station is 2.1 km. Distance from East Perth station to Daglish station is 7.0 km. Therefore, the distance from Perth station to Daglish station is 4.9 km.
  5. Web site: 21 July 2019 . Fremantle Line Train Timetable . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200201211216/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/timetablepdfs/Fremantle%20Line%2020190721.pdf . 1 February 2020 . 2 December 2021 . Transperth.
  6. Web site: Daglish Station . Transperth . 2 December 2021 . 2 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211202062720/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/Using-Transperth/Station-Facilities/Stations-Maps?sid=8 . live .
  7. Web site: PTA210020 Long Form Consultancy (Book1) Conditions and Information for Tendering . Tenders WA . 14 May 2022 . 4 . 29 September 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220929093406/https://www.tenders.wa.gov.au/watenders/tender/display/tender-details.do?CSRFNONCE=0B68DD92CA876C6A433EF0F965A84838 . live . Click Download Now, then Download for Information Only. Make sure "PTA210020 Long Form Consultancy (Book1) Conditions and Information for Tendering" is selected, then click download documents.
  8. Web site: Public transport boost for major Subiaco Oval events . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/https://www.pta.wa.gov.au/news/media-statements/public-transport-boost-for-major-subiaco-oval-events . 5 February 2022 . live. Public Transport Authority . 16 December 2021 . 22 October 2006.
  9. Web site: Morley–Ellenbrook Line Project Definition Plan . https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212245/https://www.metronet.wa.gov.au/Portals/31/Project%20Documents/Morley-Ellenbrook%20Line/Morley-Ellenbrook%20Line%20PDP.pdf . 20 September 2021 . live. Metronet . 15 December 2021 . 14 . June 2020.
  10. Web site: Morley-Ellenbrook Line Project Update – January 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212748/https://www.metronet.wa.gov.au/Portals/31/Project%20Documents/Morley-Ellenbrook%20Line/Morley-Ellenbrook%20Line%20Project%20Update%20-%20%20January%202021.pdf . 20 September 2021 . live. Metronet . 15 December 2021 . January 2021.
  11. Book: Spillman . Ken . Ken Spillman . Identity Prized : A History of Subiaco . 1985 . University of Western Australia Press . 978-0-85564-239-6.
  12. News: News And Notes . The West Australian . 8 July 1924 . 2 December 2021 . 6 . National Library of Australia . 16 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211216053444/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/31240790 . live .
  13. News: Progress of Subiaco . The Sunday Times . 20 July 1924 . 2 December 2021 . 17 . National Library of Australia . 16 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211216053444/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/58055641 . live .
  14. News: Photo F. W. Flood . Western Mail . 3 July 1924 . 30 November 2021 . 29 . National Library of Australia . 30 November 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211130134912/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/37632578 . live .
  15. Web site: Bizzaca . Kristy . City of Subiaco Thematic History and Framework . City of Subiaco . 27 November 2021 . February 2014 . 19 March 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200319045110/https://www.subiaco.wa.gov.au/CityofSubiaco/media/City-of-Subiaco/Planning-and-development/Heritage-buildings-and-places/Subiaco-Thematic-History-Framework_1.pdf . live .
  16. Web site: Daglish Railway Station . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/http://inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au/Public/Inventory/PrintSingleRecord/6a7595b1-bbbc-4c84-8e95-b5fa7c6804a6 . 5 February 2022 . live. inHerit . 2 December 2021.
  17. Web site: Our history . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/https://www.pta.wa.gov.au/about-us/our-role/our-history . 5 February 2022 . live. Public Transport Authority . 2 December 2021.
  18. Web site: Public Transport Authority Annual Report 2006/07 . Public Transport Authority . 2 December 2021 . 5, 14 . 2007 . 18 July 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160718024705/http://www.pta.wa.gov.au/portals/0/annualreports/2007/pta_annual_report.pdf . live .
  19. Web site: New Airport Line a win for commuters with services to almost double . Public Transport Authority . 25 October 2022 . 29 September 2022.
  20. Web site: Transperth . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/https://www.pta.wa.gov.au/our-services/transperth . 5 February 2022 . live. Public Transport Authority . 14 December 2021.
  21. Web site: About Us . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/about-us . 5 February 2022 . live. Transperth . 14 December 2021.
  22. Web site: Train System Map . Transperth . 29 September 2022 . 16 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220816063012/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/Portals/0/Asset/Documents/Using%20Transperth/Transperth%20System%20Map.pdf . live .
  23. Web site: Fremantle Line Train Timetable . Transperth . 25 October 2022 . 10 October 2022.
  24. Web site: Airport Line Train Timetable . Transperth . 25 October 2022 . 10 October 2022 . 2 September 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220902011917/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/timetablepdfs/Airport%20Line%2020221010.pdf . dead .
  25. Web site: Question On Notice No. 4244 asked in the Legislative Assembly on 25 June 2015 by Mr M. Mcgowan . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220205/https://parliament.wa.gov.au/parliament/pquest.nsf/viewLAPQuestByDate/4440C3F6F8C0E53248257E6E00293108 . 5 February 2022 . live. Parliament of Western Australia . 2 December 2021.
  26. Web site: Transport, Access and Parking Strategy . City of Subiaco . https://web.archive.org/web/20210403221627/https://www.subiaco.wa.gov.au/CityofSubiaco/media/City-of-Subiaco/Corporate%20Library/17-47408-FINAL-Transport-Access-and-Parking-Strategy-as-approved-by-Council-25-July-2017-low-res.pdf . 3 April 2021 . 17.
  27. Web site: Bus Timetable 33 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211004163410/https://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/timetablepdfs/Bus%20Timetable%2033%2020210718.pdf . 4 October 2021 . live. Transperth . 16 December 2021.