Melling Branch

Melling Branch
Melling Branch

The Melling Branch runs beside Western Hutt Road (State Highway 2) for its entire length.
Overview
Type Commuter rail
System Metlink
Status Open, passenger only
Locale Wellington, New Zealand
Termini Petone
Melling
Stations 2
Operation
Opened 15 December 1875 (as Wairarapa Line)
1 March 1954 (as Melling Branch)
Owner KiwiRail
Operator(s) Tranz Metro
Character Suburban
Rolling stock DM class EMUs
EM class EMUs
Technical
Line length 2.99 km
Track length 2.99 km
Track gauge 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Electrification 1500V DC catenary
Route number MEL
Route map

WellingtonRailMap.png

The Melling Branch is a railway branch line in the Hutt Valley, north of Wellington, New Zealand. It is part of the national rail network and formerly part of the Wairarapa Line. Until 2010 it was one of only two passenger-only lines in the country, now sharing that distinction with the Johnsonville Line and the Onehunga Branch.

Services are provided by Tranz Metro under the Metlink brand and marketed as the Melling Line. Trains run between Wellington and Melling from Monday to Friday.

Contents

History

Construction

The colonial government of William Fox passed the Railways Act in 1870, which authorised the surveying of several railway lines including one from Wellington to the Wairarapa. Surveyor John Rochfort was hired by the Public Works Department to investigate four potential routes for this line and reported back with his findings at the completion of his trip. He recommended a line following the road between Wellington and Petoni [sic] on the seaward side, running up the western side of the Hutt Valley before crossing the Hutt River at Silver Stream [sic], heading north through Upper Hutt, up the Mungaroa [sic] and Pakuratahi Valleys, and over the Rimutaka Range to Featherston. The Public Works Department concurred with his assessment and tasked him with completing a more detailed survey including cost estimates.

Construction of the Wairarapa Line was authorised by the Railways Act of 1871. A further survey was commissioned and carried out between January and April of 1872. The route of the line had been decided on in March but the Government, being cautious about such a large undertaking, was only willing to commit itself to the first stage of the project. The Government entered into a contract for the construction of the formation for a railway line from Wellington to Lower Hutt with John Brogden and Sons on 10 August 1872. Work commenced later that month on the 20th with a turning-of-the-first-sod ceremony officiated by the Governor General, Sir George Bowen. Progress was slow, and by July 1873 rails had only reached the south bank of the Kaiwarra [sic] Stream. The arrival of the first locomotive in November 1873 helped to speed up the pace of construction and the rails reached Lower Hutt in January 1874. John Brogden and Sons, initially tasked with creating the formation only, were also given the job of platelaying. The next few months were spent ballasting the line with this being completed on 4 April.

A special train ran two days prior to the official opening of the line to Lower Hutt and return carrying various political and civic dignitaries. The first revenue service departed Wellington on 14 April 1874, without ceremony, and arrived at Lower Hutt, also without any public reception.

Even before this first train ran, the Government was already seeking to let a contract for the construction of the next section, known as the Hutt Contract. This was awarded to Charles McKirdy and covered the section from Lower Hutt to 15 chains (990 ft; 300 m) past Haywards. The formation was completed in July 1874 and he was then also awarded the contract for platelaying the section, a task that was completed in November. Despite this, train services continued to terminate at Lower Hutt.

The contract for the next section to Upper Hutt, known as the River Contract, was let to Charles McKirdy while he was still working on the Hutt Contract. Once again he was also awarded the contract for platelaying the section and following the completion of the Hutt River Bridge in August 1875 the rails reached Silver Stream [sic] in December of that year. The contract was completed to Upper Hutt in January 1876 but severe flooding later that month necessitated repairs to the line, delaying the opening of the new section until 1 February.

Traffic on the line had grown to such an extent by 1900 that the single-track line with its sharp curves between Wellington and Petone was becoming a serious impediment. It was decided to double-track and straighten the line and accordingly the Hutt Railway and Road Improvement Act was passed in 1903 to authorise the work. New stations were established at Petone and Lower Hutt and track duplication between these two stations was completed in March 1905. The remaining work proceeded south from Petone towards Wellington but various difficulties encountered by the contractor meant that the entire double-tracked line between Lower Hutt and Lambton was not opened until 4 April 1911.

Operation

Following the opening of the first section of line to Lower Hutt, services ran to a timetable which scheduled three return trips per day, seven days a week. The journey was scheduled to take 30 minutes in each direction. At first there were no intermediate stops, Kaiwarra [sic] and Ngahauranga [sic] not being included until a week later. It was the following year before a stop at Korokoro was added.

The Melling Branch terminates at Melling railway station.

Following the completion of platelaying to Silver Stream [sic] in December 1875 some trains started running north of Lower Hutt to that station. It was not, however, until the opening of the line to Upper Hutt that services were increased beyond the original timetable.

Electric services were already running on the old route of the Wairarapa Line prior to its deviation and operation as a separate branch line when, on 23 November 1953, the first electric trains started running to Lower Hutt. Completion of electrification to Melling was achieved on 1 March 1954 when Melling Branch services commenced.[1]

The Melling Branch lost the last of its freight traffic in 1981 when the goods facilities at Lower Hutt closed and the local goods shunts to Lower Hutt ceased. Goods handling was transferred to a new facility at Gracefield.[2]

For several decades following its opening as a branch line, the Melling Branch enjoyed a full complement of peak and off-peak services, seven days a week. By 1980 Sunday services had ceased and a short-lived Melling to Petone EMU shuttle service was introduced to run on Saturdays. Following the cancellation of the shuttle service trains ran only from Monday to Friday. In 1986 off-peak services were withdrawn leaving the line with only peak-time trains.[3] For a time patronage of the line was so low that the line was in danger of being closed altogether[2] but in 2004 off-peak weekday services were restored.[3] The lack of weekend services has been highlighted as an issue when events are held at the Westpac Stadium. Local business owners have raised concerns of access for patrons of Wellington's matches for the 2011 Rugby World Cup. Requests have been made for the provision of special weekend services for these rugby matches but the Regional Council has declined, saying "The Melling line doesn't operate on weekends anyway and this will not change during the Rugby World Cup."[4]

Deviation

End of the line.

A severe shortage of coal following World War II led to the decision in February 1946 to electrify the remainder of Wellington’s suburban passenger rail network. Work had already commenced on the Hutt Valley Branch to extend it north with the intention that it eventually become the main line. It had been hoped that the branch could join the existing Wairarapa Line at Silverstream, thereby avoiding additional crossings of the Hutt River, but this was not possible due to the unstable nature of the terrain in the area around Taita Gorge.

The Hutt Valley Branch officially became part of the Wairarapa Line on 1 March 1954. All Hutt Valley and Wairarapa train services commenced using the new route with the old route up the western side of the Hutt Valley having been closed to all traffic the previous day. It was also at this time that the Petone to Melling section commenced operation as the Melling Branch terminating at a new station that had been built on the south side of the Melling Link Road, thereby avoiding the need for the line to cross any roads. The old track from Melling to Manor Park was later lifted and the original Melling station, on the north side of the road, was removed several years later. As the traffic requirements of the line were greatly diminished following its change in status to that of a branch line, the double tracking between Hutt Valley Junction and Lower Hutt was deemed surplus to requirements and singled by 13 July 1958.[5]

Services

Melling Line trains currently operate both peak and off-peak schedules from Monday to Friday only. Services arrive at and depart from Melling half-hourly (peak), hourly (off-peak). Trains stop at the following stations:

Future

It has been suggested that the Melling Branch could be extended across the Hutt River to provide rail access to central Lower Hutt, extended to provide a cross-valley link to the Wairarapa Line at Waterloo Station. The Hutt Corridor Plan[6] (December 2003) identified "Lack of direct passenger rail access to the Lower Hutt Central area" as an issue for the long-term vision for the corridor. However, as the Hutt Valley has low population growth, the viability of this or similar proposals remains in doubt.

Another project with implications for the Melling Branch is the SH2 Melling to Haywards Upgrade which proposes to establish interchanges at the Melling and Kennedy Good intersections to improve traffic flows. The Melling interchange will also improve access to Melling Railway Station. This project is currently in an investigation phase.[7]

References

  • Cameron, Walter Norman (1976). A Line Of Railway: The Railway Conquest of the Rimutakas. Wellington: New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society. ISBN 0-908573-00-6 

Footnotes

  1. ^ Churchman, Geoffrey B. (1995). "Hutt Valley lines 1950s". Railway Electrification in Australia and New Zealand. Wellington: IPL Books. pp. 32, 34. ISBN 0-908876-79-3 
  2. ^ a b Bromby, Robin (2003). "Branch Lines – North Island". Rails That Built A Nation: An Encyclopedia of New Zealand Railways. Wellington: Grantham House Publishing. p. 74. ISBN 1 86934 080 9 
  3. ^ a b Castle, David (31 December 2005). "Melling Branch". Hutt Valley Signals. Lower Hutt. http://valleysignals.org.nz/melling/melling.html. Retrieved 16 January 2011 
  4. ^ BOYACK, NICHOLAS (9 August 2011). "No extra Melling trains for Rugby World Cup action". Hutt News (Lower Hutt: Fairfax New Zealand). http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/local-papers/hutt-news/5413684/No-extra-Melling-trains-for-Rugby-World-Cup-action. Retrieved 12 August 2011. 
  5. ^ Yonge, John (1993). New Zealand Railway And Tramway Atlas (Fourth ed.). Exeter: The Quail Map Company. p. 16. ISBN 0 900609 92 3 
  6. ^ "Hutt Corridor Plan" (PDF). Wellington: Greater Wellington Regional Council. December 2003. http://www.gw.govt.nz/assets/Transport/Regional-transport/Hutt-Corridor/HuttCorridorPlan.pdf. Retrieved 16 January 2011 
  7. ^ "SH2 Melling to Haywards Upgrade Investigation". NZ Transport Agency. 2009. http://www.nzta.govt.nz/network/projects/sh2-melling-to-haywards-upgrade-investigation/index.html. Retrieved 16 January 2011 

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