St George's Street railway station

Coordinates: 36°54′18″S 174°41′48″E / 36.905°S 174.6967°E / -36.905; 174.6967
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St George's Street
Auckland Transport Urban rail
Aerial view of St George's Street railway station in 1968 (bottom-left), near the intersection between Saint George's Road and the Western Line
General information
Coordinates36°54′18″S 174°41′48″E / 36.905°S 174.6967°E / -36.905; 174.6967
Line(s)Western Line
PlatformsSide platform
Construction
Platform levels1
History
Opened1911
Closed1980
Western Line route map
0.0
Waitematā (Auckland)
Quay Park junction
Ronayne Street
Parnell Rise
Cowie Street
Newmarket Junction
3.7
Newmarket
Broadway
Davis Crescent
Park Road
Southern motorway (State Highway 1)
Normanby Road
Mount Eden Road
Porters Avenue
George Street
Sandringham Road
Morningside Drive
St Lukes Road
Asquith Avenue
Rossgrove Terrace
Carrington Road
Blockhouse Bay Road
St Jude Street
Portage Road
Hetana Street
Titirangi Road
West Coast Road
Seymour Road
Bruce McLaren Road
Henderson Valley Road
Sturges Road
Metcalfe Road
North Candia Road
Swanson (end of suburban services)
Christian Road
274m Waitakere Tunnel
Waitakere Road
Taupaki Road
Waitakere Road
Waimauku Station Road
Mill Road

St George's Street railway station was a train station in Avondale, Auckland, New Zealand.[1] It was on the Western Line and was adjacent to the St George's Road level crossing. Note the difference in the name of the station versus the road on which it was located.

The station was opened in November 1907.[2] It was between New Lynn station and Avondale station. It closed at the same time as the Croydon Road and Westbrook stations, also on the Western Line, on a six-month trial basis on 18 August 1980,[3] with the closure being made permanent on 16 August 1981.[2] No trace of this station or its side platform remains today.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Rails magazine, September 1980, p.14
  2. ^ a b Scoble, Juliet (2010). "Names & Opening & Closing Dates of Railway Stations" (PDF). Rail Heritage Trust of New Zealand. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  3. ^ Western Leader, 26 August 1980, front page.

See also[edit]