- Bay Express
The Bay Express was a
passenger train betweenWellington and Napier inNew Zealand 'sNorth Island , operating from Monday,11 December 1989 until Sunday,7 October 2001 . It was operated byNew Zealand Railways , laterTranz Scenic .Introduction
The Bay Express was preceded by the Endeavour, which ran the same route from 1972 until 1989. The Endeavour started service with upgraded carriages and a buffet car, but in August 1981 these were diverted to the
North Island Main Trunk as the Blue Fern and replaced by carriages of a lesser quality without a buffet car. The introduction of the Bay Express was intended to return the standard ofHawkes Bay passenger services back to their former level.Rolling stock
The train's consist comprised two modular guards vans converted into power-luggage vans with 11kW petrol generators at the handbrake ends (one from
Mitsubishi , Japan, the other fromDaewoo , Korea) and three 56' 1930s-built passenger carriages, one a former red Picton/Greymouth car extensively rebuilt into a servery and rear view observation car with 24 seats, arranged alcove-style around tables. The seats wereAddington Workshops -built and installed in this car for the Picton/Greymouth runs, reupholstered with a slight alteration made to facilitate more comfort on the head and neck. The train included two of three remaining Endeavour cars, each seating 51 in the same seat type and format with large viewing windows like those on theTranzAlpine . The last car of the consist featured a large observation window at the rear. A new form of pressure-ventilation was installed in all three carriages, with associated ceiling-mounted trunking to filter the air throughout each car.Additional Rolling Stock
Initially very popular, the train attracted good patronage and, from 1993 onward, the odd Northerner car or two, a thoroughly refurbished Auckland excursion car and later a thoroughly refurbished Wairarapa Connection car, the Auckland excursion modular van with a 37.5-kW generator housed in the non handbrake end module, the first and third modular NIMT 11-kW power-luggage vans were frequently being used to bolster this service.
From
January 12 untilJanuary 25 1993 , the first of three 56' air conditioned rear-view cars and the first of three 90-kW power-luggage vans exclusive to the Northerner/Overlander passenger trains were put to use on the Napier train for trialling purposes. In the meantime, one of the 51-seat cars exclusive to this train was transferred for trial use on the Southerner.In December 1991, with the alterations made to NIMT daylight passenger services, the Bay Express lost its key attraction: the rear-view and servery car to the new Overlander daylight passenger trains. It was replaced by the only 56' car to serve a Governor-General as a Vice-Regal car later Southerner, later Auckland excursion, later Northerner buffet car. However, the rear-view and servery car returned when the three NIMT passenger trainsets were fully re-equipped.
Accident in 1995
On Sunday,
12 November 1995 the Bay Express, consisting of the second Northerner power-luggage van, a Northerner car, a Bay Express car and its servery/rear-view car was involved in a derailment. This resulted in the recently refurbished buffet car, a Northerner car and the first NIMT 90-kW power-luggage van forming a replacement train until Christmas 1995.Re-Equipped and Refurbished
Apart from the servery and rear-view car, the train was fully re-equipped, with two former Picton - Greymouth later
TranzAlpine /TranzCoastal panorama cars, the first Southerner power-luggage van with its viewing module restored as a luggage module and the third of three modular vans assigned to the Endeavour. The two panorama cars were completely refurbished, each with 50 seats to a design introduced on the Overlander, and air conditioned. At one end in each car, eight seats were arranged in bays of four, alcove-style, the rest forward-facing. The two "new" power-luggage vans featured 50-kW generators, also housed in the handbrake ends. All were painted in the new Cato blue scheme. The servery and rear-view car was merely inspected for damage and cleared to run with the newer stock, but later incorporated the horizontal full-length 350-mm Tranz Scenic band on the sides in place of the white stripe and yellow band. The dark blue livery remained til 1997.In 1997, while the refurbished buffet car resumed temporary duties on the run as it had in 1991 and 1993, the servery and rear-view car was refurbished. All seats were reupholstered and the interior decor altered to match the other cars, and the new "Cato blue" paint scheme applied on the exterior.
Timetable
The timetable had an 8am departure from Wellington, reaching Napier at 1.30pm. The return service departed Napier at 2.30pm and arrived in Wellington at 8pm. The first service, for invited guests and dignitaries, operated on
10 December 1989 and regular services for the general public commenced the next day.Demise
Unlike the Tranz Alpine and Tranz Coastal services, the Bay Express primarily relied upon local point to point traffic and as a result was placed under increasing pressure by the continued real drop in airline ticket prices over the 1990s, and the price of owning/operating private cars. The travel time of the Bay Express was uncompetitive compared with both air and car travel (five hours thirty minutes on average by rail compared to one hour by air and four hours by car).
Following significant changes in management withint Tranz Rail, a bottom up review of the business indicated that the Bay Express was not a financially sustainable service. By 2001, roughly 45 passengers were riding the Bay Express per trip, and it was proving to be unprofitable. Subsidies from the central government or other bodies were not forthcoming, and despite protests against cessation and proposals on how to improve ridership, the cancellation of the Bay Express was announced, effective
8 October 2001 .External links
Pages on the Bay Express from the Ormondville Rail Preservation Group:
* [http://www.geocities.com/ormondvillerail/bayex/rails1989_90.html Introduction of the Bay Express]
* [http://www.geocities.com/ormondvillerail/bayex/railsmarch1990.html 1990 media article and photos of the Bay Express]
* [http://www.geocities.com/ormondvillerail/bayex/endofbayexpress.html End of the Bay Express]
* [http://www.geocities.com/ormondvillerail/bayex/bayexpresspix.html Bay Express pictures]
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