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词条 Daglish railway station
释义

  1. History

  2. Services

  3. Platforms

  4. Bus routes

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2012}}{{Use Australian English|date=January 2012}}{{Infobox station
|name = Daglish
|type =
|style = Transperth
|image = Transperth Daglish Train Station.jpg
|image_size =
|image_caption =
|address = Railway Road & Stubbs Terrace, Daglish
|country = Australia
|coordinates = {{coord|-31.951971|115.813193|region:AU-WA_type:railwaystation|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
|elevation =
|distance = 5.0 kilometres from Perth
|line = {{legend0|#005A9C}} Fremantle
|bus_routes =
|bus_stands =
|structure = Ground
|platform = 2 (1 island)
|depth =
|levels =
|tracks = 2
|parking =
|bicycle =
|opened = 14 July 1924
|closed =
|rebuilt =
|electrified = Yes
|disabled =
|architectural_style =
|code = FDH
99231 (platform 1)
99232 (platform 2)
|owned = Public Transport Authority
|operator = Transperth
|zone = 1
|former =
|passengers =
|pass_year =
|pass_percent =
|pass_system =
|mpassengers =
|services ={{s-rail|title=Transperth}}{{s-line|system=Transperth|line=Fremantle|previous=Subiaco|next=Shenton Park}}
|web =
|route_map =
|map_state = }}

Daglish railway station is a railway station on the Transperth network. It is located on the Fremantle line, five kilometres from Perth station serving the suburbs of Daglish, Subiaco and Wembley.

History

Daglish station opened on 14 July 1924, named after Henry Daglish, Western Australia's first Australian Labor Party State Premier, predating the suburb of the same name. During planning and construction it was called Lawler Street station, but Daglish was its official name at the time of opening. Railway lands originally reserved for a goods depot were released in a residential subdivision in 1925, following the establishment of the goods yard at East Perth. A pedestrian bridge was built in 1936.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

The station closed on 1 September 1979 along with the rest of the Fremantle line, re-opening on 29 July 1983 when services were restored.[8]

In May 2007 a single ended turnback siding was opened between the mainline tracks at the Fremantle end of the station, permitting the reversal of six-car trains moving special event crowds to and from Subiaco Oval.[9]

Services

Daglish station is served by Transperth Fremantle line services from Fremantle to Perth that continue through to Midland via the Midland line.[10][11]

Platforms

{{tst|top|caption=[2759] Daglish station platforms}}{{tst
|stop=99231 |platform=1
|line=Fremantle
|pattern=All stations
|dest=Perth
|notes=}}{{tst
|stop=99232 |platform=2 |pspan=2
|line=Fremantle |lspan=2
|pattern=All stations, B
|dest=Fremantle
|notes=}}{{tst
|pattern=D
|dest=Shenton Park
|notes=}}{{tst|bottom}}

Bus routes

{{brt|top}}{{brt|stop=[19424] Railway Road (north-east bound)|sspan=2
|route=27
|dest=to East Perth via Bagot Road & Kings Park Road[12]}}{{brt|route=906
|dest=Rail replacement service to Perth station}}{{brt|stop=[19428] Railway Road (south-east bound)|sspan=2
|route=27
|dest=to Claremont station via Lemnos Street[12]}}{{brt|route=906
|dest=Rail replacement service to Fremantle station}}{{brt|bottom}}

References

1. ^{{cite news|title=Lawler Street railway station|url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/22629326|accessdate=5 December 2016|work=The West Australian |location=Perth, WA |date=23 August 1923|page=6}}
2. ^{{cite news|title=The New Railway Station |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/78325117|accessdate=5 December 2016|work=The Daily News|date=9 October 1923|location=Perth, WA|page=6}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=Daglish Land|url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/148288003|accessdate=5 December 2016|work=Westralian Worker|date=3 July 1925|location=Perth, WA|page=11}}
4. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20080721030836/http://www.righttrack.wa.gov.au/Portals/3/media/History_Fremantle.pdf History of Stations on the Fremantle Line] Right Track
5. ^{{cite web|title=Daglish Railway Station - 1924 |url=http://www.subiaco.wa.gov.au/template.asp?navSelect=11&mainNavID=11&pageRecID=312|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130413230219/http://www.subiaco.wa.gov.au/template.asp?navSelect=11&mainNavID=11&pageRecID=312|dead-url=yes|archive-date=2013-04-13|website=City of Subiaco|accessdate=5 December 2016}}
6. ^{{Citation|author1=Spillman, Ken|author2=City of Subiaco|title=Identity prized: a history of Subiaco|date=1985|publisher=University of Western Australia Press|location=Crawley, WA|isbn=978-0-85564-240-2}}
7. ^{{cite news|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article25143904|title=Bridge for Daglish|work=The West Australian |location=Perth, WA |date=23 March 1936|accessdate=10 April 2013 |page=11}}
8. ^Our History Public Transport Authority
9. ^Public Transport Authority of Western Australia Annual Report 2006/07
10. ^Fremantle Line Timetable Transperth 31 January 2016
11. ^[https://bitre.gov.au/publications/2012/files/report_131.pdf Understanding Australia's urban railways] Bureau of Infrastructure Transport & Regional Economics July 2012 page 12
12. ^{{Cite Transperth bus|27}}

External links

  • Gallery History of Western Australian Railways & Stations
{{s-info|name=Daglish|zone=Zone 1}}{{s-start}}{{s-rail|title=Transperth}}{{s-line|system=Transperth|line=Fremantle|branch=All, B|previous=Subiaco|next=Shenton Park|note=Zone 1|note2=Zone 1|rows1=2}}{{s-line|system=Transperth|line=Fremantle|branch=D|next=Shenton Park|note=Free Transit Zone|note2=Zone 1|hide1=yes}}{{s-end}}{{Public Transport Authority of Western Australia railway stations|Fremantle=y|state=collapsed}}

3 : Fremantle railway line|Railway stations in Perth, Western Australia|Railway stations opened in 1924

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