Port Pirie railway station (Mary Elie Street) explained

Port Pirie railway station (Mary Elie Street)
(1967–1989)
Image Upright:0.9
Address:Entrance 3 Mary Elie Street, Port Pirie, South Australia; parallel to Wandearah Road
Coordinates:-33.1843°N 138.0119°W
Owned:South Australian Railways and Commonwealth Railways 1967–1975
Australian National Railways Commission 1975–1989
Line:Adelaide to Port Pirie
Embedded:
Abovestyle:font-size:88%;
Label1:Gauge
Data1:Standard – 1435 mm (4 ft 8 in)
Broad – 1600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Label2:Structure
Data2:Two concrete brick buildings: booking office and refreshment room
Label3:Platform configuration
Data3:One raised island platform: broad gauge on western side (South Australian Railways), standard gauge on eastern side (Commonwealth Railways)
Label4:Platform length
Data4:
700abbr=offNaNabbr=off
Label5:Stopping
Data5:All through passenger trains on standard-gauge Sydney–Perth rail corridor
Passenger trains on broad-gauge line to Adelaide
Label6:Opened
Data6:12 November 1967
Label7:Closed
Data7:1989
Label8:Immediate predecessor stations
Data8:Ellen Street, 1885–1967
Solomontown, 1911–1970
Port Pirie Junction, 1937–1967
Label9:Successor
station
Data9:Coonamia provisional stopping place, 1989–2010s

Port Pirie railway station (Mary Elie Street) was the fifth of six railway stations for passengers that operated at various times from 1876 to serve the small maritime town (later city) of Port Pirie, 216km (134miles) by rail north of Adelaide, South Australia. As with several of Port Pirie's other stations before it, the station was built to accommodate a change of track gauge on railway lines leading into the town.

  Station Duration Gauge
1Port Pirie (at what became known as Port Pirie South)1876 to after 1911ng 
2Ellen Street1902–1967ng bg*
3Solomontown 1911–1967ng
4Port Pirie Junction – also signposted as, and known colloquially as, Solomontown1937–1967ngbgsg
5Mary Elie Street (this article)1967–1989bgsg
6Coonamia stopping place1st, 1929 to after 1937
2nd, 1989–2010s
sg
  • In 1937, one of the two narrow-gauge tracks along Ellen Street was made dual-gauge by the addition of broad-gauge rails.

Gauges are shown in these colours:

narrow, broad and standard.

Need for a new station

In 1966, planning commenced for the long-overdue conversion to standard gauge of the South Australian Railways narrow gauge line from Port Pirie to the New South Wales border. This project was to culminate in 1970, when for the first time trains were able to travel the entire Sydney–Perth rail corridor without a change of gauge.

At Port Pirie, new standard-gauge sidings and other facilities would be needed to handle the increased freight and passenger traffic enabled by the upgraded line. At that time the city had three passenger stations:

Implementation

Although space was limited in Port Pirie's rail yards, standard-gauge and broad-gauge track would replace the narrow-gauge sidings (in new configurations) at Port Pirie South yard. Passengers, parcels and mail would transfer across a new island platform paralleling Wandearah Road; the station entrance would front Mary Elie Street. As before, broad-gauge trains came from Adelaide, to the south, and standard-gauge trains from Port Augusta, to the north; the new element was standard-gauge trains from Broken Hill, to the east.[3]

The configuration of tracks and platform was not easily devised – the South Australian Railways insisted that all freight and passenger traffic from the rail corridor would enter the Port Pirie yard and station.[4] Since there was no room for track to continue on at the northern end, the station would have to be a stub terminal, and without the capacity that would allow passengers to join or leave at the middle or either end of the train, a platform capable of holding an entire passenger train was necessary. The Indian Pacific, on its cross-continent journey due to commence in January 1970, would be much longer than the trains operating before then, namely the Trans-Australian to Western Australia, other standard-gauge services to Whyalla and Woomera, and the East–west Express and other trains to Adelaide. Therefore, the platform would need to be 700m (2,300feet) long – the longest in Australia.[5]

The new station, from which trains started to run on 12 November 1967,[6] was well received by the town populace; Port Pirie Town Council had been advocating a terminal station there for more than 25 years.[7] [2]

Facilities

Facilities constructed at the station included a waiting room, a refreshment room, a resthouse for train crew, a locomotive stabling depot, diesel fuelling, passenger car water supply, and a turntable.[8] As had occurred at Port Pirie Junction station, a run-around loop on each side permitted locomotives to be detached and turned, and a shunting locomotive took the carriages away to be placed in the sequence needed for the return journey. The Indian Pacific, which first arrived in Port Pirie on 24 February 1970,[9] was the exception: since Port Pirie was only a pause in its journey, its carriages did not need to be rearranged. However, the entire train needed to be pushed back for 3.6km (02.2miles)[10] to return to the mainline and continue on its way – a time-wasting procedure. Much longer operating delays occurred with freight traffic, not only because of the dead-end configuration of the tracks but also because broad-gauge and standard-gauge bogies had to be exchanged on all freight cars that travelled between the South Australian Railways and Commonwealth Railways. A 1971 report stated: "It is expected that in the near future the Australian National Railways Commission will construct a by-pass line around the Port Pirie yard and station to facilitate the fast through movement of freight trains between Sydney and Perth."[4]

In the event, the by-pass line was not laid around the Port Pirie's rail yards and station but on the mainline, where tracks forked out from the yards' exit: north to Port Augusta and south to Crystal Brook, the latter standardised in 1970. The "missing link" between them was completed in 1978 by 600m (2,000feet) of new track to form the "Coonamia triangle", which not only enabled straight-through traffic but provided a useful means of turning locomotives and trains.[5] [11] By then, the Australian National Railways Commission had acquired the South Australian Railways and Commonwealth Railways, so locomotives did not have to be changed at Mary Elie Street when going to and from what had previously been separate systems.[3] The Indian Pacific, however, did not bypass the station until 1986.[4]

Closure

Mary Elie Street station closed on 5 February 1989.[3] It was still considered necessary to provide a facility for Port Pirie passengers of The Ghan, Indian Pacific, and (until June 1991, when it ceased) the Trans-Australian,[3] [12] so a tiny "provisional" stop was simultaneously re-established at Coonamia (see map, station 6), allowing trains to pick up and drop off Port Pirie passengers without having to go through the reversing procedure.

Nine months later, the federal House of Representatives Standing Committee on Transport, Communications and Infrastructure recommended that the Indian Pacific and Trans-Australian, which still ran over three different rail authorities'[13] tracks, be booked, staffed and controlled by Australian National and be upgraded, refurbished and marketed as luxury train journeys.[4] Further, "Intra-state passengers should only be carried on a stand-by basis, and should rely on alternatives for their primary transport requirements".[14] Australian National acted quickly to discontinue South Australian non-metropolitan intrastate train services, which it achieved in December 1989. Since it served interstate trains, Coonamia remained in use until the 2010s, although climbing down over the ballast shoulder and down to ground level was a difficult, undignified travel experience for the few people who persisted in travelling on a long-distance train within their state.

In 1990, tracks to, and at, the Mary Elie Street platform were lifted.[3] Redevelopment of the northern (ticket office) end as the Port Pirie's tourist information centre, arts centre and public library was completed in 2009. Until 2012, a former Commonwealth Railways GM class locomotive and three 1950s-era passenger cars[15] were stabled at the platform as a public display; one car was a restaurant providing on-the-job training for young people in the hospitality industry with the support of Port Pirie Regional Council and The Foundation for Young Australians.[16]

As of 2021, the platform, its canopy and the block formerly used as a waiting room remained. A miniature railway operated in the garden surrounds. The forecourt served as a bus station.[17]

Post-closure

Following the station's closure, three types of railway operations continued at Port Pirie:[18]

Preceding stations: Ellen Street, Port Pirie Junction, and Solomontown.

Concurrent station: none.

Subsequent station: Coonamia provisional stopping place.

External links

Notes and References

  1. The gauges were 1067 mm (3 ft 6 in), 1435 mm (4 ft  in), and 1600 mm (5 ft 3 in).
  2. News: Pirie terminus: Mary Elie Street site: Council wants no trains in Ellen Street . . . 12,371 . Port Pirie . 31 March 1943. 1 . 8 September 2021.
  3. History of the Australian National Railways Commission, part 1: 1978–1990 . Ramsey . John . 2008 . Proceedings of the 2008 convention . Adelaide . Modelling the Railways of South Australia .
  4. Web site: The planning and management of rail standardization projects in Australia . G.R. . Webb . 1976 . Australasian Transport Research Forum . ARTF Incorporated . 8 September 2021. 48 .
  5. Web site: Coonamia–Weeroona (diagram AR080 – page 26) . Vincent. Graham. 2019 . SA Track and Signal . G.F. Vincent . 24 January 2020 .
  6. South Australian Railways (1967). Weekly Notice 44/67. Cited in Web site: Route information Adelaide to Port Pirie . Chris . Drymalik . 2021 . Chris's Commonwealth railways information (ComRails) . Chris Drymalik . 12 September 2021 .
  7. Port Pirie passenger trains . Rodney . Barrington . 2006 . Proceedings of the 2006 convention . Adelaide . Modelling the Railways of South Australia .
  8. Australian National Railways (1979). Working Timetable 1 July. Cited in Web site: Route information Port Pirie to Broken Hill . Chris . Drymalik . 2021 . Chris's Commonwealth railways information (ComRails) . Chris Drymalik . 12 September 2021 .
  9. Web site: Indian Pacific train turns 40. 23 February 2010. WA Today . theage.com.au . 25 February 2010.
  10. Google Earth: "Port Pirie SA".
  11. Inwards traffic continued to be lead-zinc-silver ore for the Port Pirie smelter; outwards traffic was mainly bunker fuel for the power station at Broken Hill and sulphuric acid from the smelter.
  12. September 1986 . Western Report . . Redfern . Australian Railway Historical Society . 281.
  13. Western Australian government, New South Wales government, and Australian National.
  14. Book: House of Representatives Standing Committee on Transport, Communications and Infrastructure . Rail: five systems – one solution: the efficiency of Australian National's east–west operations . November 1989 . Canberra . Australian Government Publishing Service.
  15. https://www.comrails.com/cr_carriages/y_wegmann.html Wegmann cars.
  16. https://www.westonlangford.com/images/photo/127936/ Weston Langford Railway Photography.
  17. Web site: Tourism & Arts Centre . . 2021 . Port Pirie Regional Council . 12 September 2021 .
  18. Web site: Port Pirie environs . Vincent. Graham. 2022 . SA Track and Signal . G.F. Vincent . 21 August 2023 .