This page lists all railway stations in Wellington, New Zealand that are or were on Wellington's suburban passenger rail network. Ownership of all station buildings except Wellington was transferred to Greater Wellington Regional Council on 1 July 2011. [1] Wellington Station is owned by KiwiRail, along with all station platforms and other railway network infrastructure. [2] All stations have platforms, the majority of which were designed to accommodate 9-car DM/D EMUs. Exceptions to this include the Wairarapa stations, which have platforms long enough for either 3 or 7 car sets of SW-class carriages; and those on the Johnsonville Line, which have platforms designed for 6-car Matangi sets. Most stations in the suburban network have been upgraded to accommodate the "Matangi" electric units which were introduced from 2010. [3] The train services are run by Transdev Wellington.
Station A | Metlink code | Line(s) | Service(s) | Serves | km from Wellington | Fare zone(s) | Opened B |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ava | AVA | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Ava, Petone | 12.5 | 4 | 27 May 1927 [4] |
Awarua Street | AWAR | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Ngaio | 6.0 | 3 | 2 July 1938 [5] |
Box Hill | BOXH | Khandallah | 7.2 | 16 July 1956 [6] | |||
Carterton | CART | Wairarapa Line | Wairarapa Connection | Carterton | 76.6 | 13 | 1 November 1880 [7] |
Crofton Downs | CROF | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Crofton Downs, Chartwell | 4.9 | 3 | 25 March 1963 [6] [5] |
Epuni | EPUN | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Epuni, Boulcott | 16.5 | 5 | 7 January 1946 [6] |
Featherston | FEAT | Wairarapa Connection | Featherston | 57.2 | 11 | 12 October 1878 [6] | |
Heretaunga | HERE | Hutt Valley | Heretaunga | 28.2 | 6 | 1908 [8] | |
Johnsonville | JOHN | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Johnsonville | 10.5 | 3 | 21 September 1885 [9] [10] |
Kenepuru | KENE | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Kenepuru, Linden | 16.2 | 5 | 8 April 1963 [6] |
Khandallah | KHAN | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Khandallah | 8.0 | 3 | 21 September 1885 [9] |
Linden | LIND | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Linden | 14.9 | 4 | 28 July 1940 [6] |
Mana [d] | MANA | Mana | 23.2 | 6 | 5 September 1949 [6] | ||
Manor Park | MANO | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Manor Park | 23.7 | 1 March 1954 [11] | |
Masterton | MAST | Wairarapa Connection | Masterton | 91.0 | 14 | 1 November 1880 [7] | |
Matarawa | MATA | Carterton | 69.6 | 13 | 1 November 1880 [7] | ||
Maymorn | MAYM | Maymorn | 38.8 | 8 | 3 November 1955 [12] | ||
Melling [e] | MELL | Melling Branch | Melling | Melling, Lower Hutt city centre | 13.5 | 4 | 26 May 1908 [6] |
Naenae | NAEN | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Naenae, Avalon | 18.3 | 5 | 7 January 1946 [13] |
Ngaio | NGAI | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Ngaio | 5.2 | 3 | 21 September 1885 [9] [10] |
Ngauranga | NGAU | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley, Melling | Ngauranga | 4.8 | 20 April 1874 [14] | |
Paekākāriki | PAEK | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Paekākāriki | 38.8 | 8 | 31 March 1886 [6] |
Paraparaumu | PARA | Paraparaumu, Raumati | 48.3 | 9 | 2 August 1886 [6] | ||
Paremata | PARE | Paremata | 21.9 | 6 | 24 September 1885 [6] [9] [10] | ||
Petone | PETO | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley, Melling, Wairarapa Connection | Petone | 10.5 | 4 | June 1875 [14] |
Plimmerton | PLIM | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Plimmerton | 24.5 | 6 | 2 October 1885 [6] |
Pomare | POMA | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Pomare, Stokes Valley | 22.0 | 5 | 9 August 1954 [6] |
Porirua | PORI | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Porirua city centre | 17.7 | 24 September 1885 [6] [9] [15] | |
Pukerua Bay [g] | PUKE | Pukerua Bay | 30.4 | 7 | 25 December 1885 [6] | ||
Raroa | RARO | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Raroa | 9.2 | 3 | 17 June 1940 [6] |
Redwood | REDW | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Redwood | 13.1 | 4 | 15 December 1963 [6] |
Renall Street | RENA | Wairarapa Line | Wairarapa Connection | Masterton | 89.4 | 14 | 1936 [16] |
Silverstream | SILV | Hutt Valley | Silverstream, Pinehaven | 26.8 | 6 | 21 November 1954 [6] | |
Simla Crescent | SIML | Johnsonville Line | Johnsonville | Khandallah | 6.9 | 3 | 2 July 1938 [5] |
Solway | SOLW | Wairarapa Line | Wairarapa Connection | Masterton | 88.1 | 14 | 1 November 1880 [7] |
Taitā | TAIT | Hutt Valley | Taitā | 20.6 | 5 | 14 April 1947 [11] | |
Takapu Road | TAKA | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Redwood, Grenada North | 11.9 | 4 | 20 June 1937 [6] |
Tawa | TAWA | Tawa | 13.8 | 24 September 1885 [6] [9] [10] | |||
Trentham | TREN | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Trentham | 29.4 | 6/7 | 8 January 1907 [6] |
Upper Hutt | UPPE | Hutt Valley, Wairarapa Connection | Upper Hutt city centre | 32.4 | 7 | 1 February 1876 [17] | |
Waikanae | WAIK | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Waikanae | 55.4 | 10 | 2 August 1886 [6] |
Wallaceville | WALL | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Wallaceville, Trentham | 31.3 | 7 | 1 February 1876 [6] |
Waterloo | WATE | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley, Wairarapa Connection | Waterloo, Waiwhetu, Lower Hutt city centre | 15.5 | 4 | 27 May 1927 [4] |
Wellington | WELL | All | Wellington city centre | 0.0 | 1 | 19 June 1937 [18] | |
Western Hutt [k] | WEST | Melling Branch | Melling | Alicetown, Lower Hutt city centre | 11.9 | 4 | 14 April 1874 [19] |
Wingate | WING | Wairarapa Line | Hutt Valley | Wingate, Avalon | 19.5 | 5 | 25 September 1950 [6] |
Woburn | WOBU | Woburn, Waiwhetu | 14.4 | 4 | 27 May 1927 [4] | ||
Woodside | WOOD | Wairarapa Connection | Greytown | 65.1 | 12 | 14 May 1880 [6] |
Station A | Line(s) | Service(s) | Serves | Opened B | Closed B |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andrews | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 26 June 1938 [6] | 28 February 1954 [13] |
Beach | Hutt Park Railway | — | — | 6 February 1885 | 31 January 1950 [6] |
Belmont | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 15 December 1875 [6] | 28 February 1954 [13] |
Clareville | — | — | 1 November 1880 [7] | 30 November 1970 [6] | |
Cross Creek | — | — | 12 October 1878 | 30 October 1955 [20] | |
Dalefield | — | — | 1 November 1880 [7] | 1 February 1981 [6] | |
Fernside | — | — | 14 May 1880 [6] | 30 March 1975 [6] | |
Gracefield [a] | Gracefield Branch | — | — | 4 April 1943 [6] | 1 May 2002 [6] |
Greytown | Greytown Branch | — | — | 14 May 1880 [21] | 25 December 1953 [22] |
Haywards [b] | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 15 December 1875 [6] | 1 March 1954 [13] |
Hutt Park | Hutt Park Railway | — | — | 6 February 1885 [6] | 19 November 1915 [6] |
Hutt Park | Gracefield Branch | — | — | 17 September 1927 27 February 1960 | 5 February 1949 11 May 1965 |
Kaitoke | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 28 December 1877 [23] | 30 October 1955 [20] |
Kaiwharawhara | — | — | 20 April 1874 [14] | 21 November 2013 [24] | |
Lambton [c] | — | Wellington | 1885 [8] | 19 June 1937 [18] | |
Mangaroa | — | — | 1 January 1878 [6] | 30 October 1955 [20] | |
Middleton | — | — | 8 February 1881 [6] | April 1891 [6] | |
Muri | North Island Main Trunk | Kapiti | Pukerua Bay | 28 July 1952 [6] | 30 April 2011 [25] |
Otaihanga | — | — | 2 August 1886 [6] | 1902 [6] | |
Pigeon Bush | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 12 October 1878 | 30 October 1955 [20] |
Pipitea Point | — | — | 14 April 1874 [26] | 30 September 1884 [6] | |
Pitcaithly's [f] | — | — | December 1903 [6] | 26 March 1938 [6] | |
Silverstream Bridge [h] | — | — | 26 May 1908 [6] [8] 17 August 1942 [6] | 1917 [8] 1954 [13] | |
Summit | — | — | 12 October 1878 | 30 October 1955 [20] | |
Te Aro | Te Aro Extension | — | Wellington | 27 March 1893 [27] | 23 April 1917 [27] |
Thorndon | North Island Main Trunk | — | — | 24 September 1885 | 8 June 1937 [28] |
Waingawa | Wairarapa Line | — | — | 30 March 1921 [6] [16] | - |
Wainui [i] | North Island Main Trunk | — | — | 1 December 1886 [6] | 3 February 1900 [6] [29] |
Wellington [j] | Wairarapa Line | — | Wellington city centre | 1 November 1880 [7] | 1885 [8] |
The GWRC 2009 Long Term Community Plan (LTCCP) indicates that it is considering introducing user-pays charges to some station carparks where demand exceeds supply. Some stations are being considered for expanded parking facilities where sufficient demand exists and suitable land is available, but necessary station upgrades to accommodate new rolling stock have constrained the amount of funding that can be committed to projects like improved Park-and-Ride facilities. [3]
There are several proposals for new stations to be built along existing lines.
GWRC's Western Corridor Plan calls for improvements to rail services in the Kapiti area, including two new stations: Raumati, proposed for completion in 2009, south of Paraparaumu, probably just north of the intersection of State Highway 1 and Poplar Avenue; and Lindale, proposed for completion in 2010, would be part of a larger transport hub north of Paraparaumu. However, a more recent decision by the council to invest its funds and resources in electrification and double-tracking to Waikanae, and the upgrade of Paraparaumu and Waikanae stations, has meant that consideration will now not be given to these new stations before 2010. [31] [32] GWRC's passenger transport committee has also recommended that electrification be extended to Waikanae, bringing the existing station there into the Wellington rail network – although the Western Corridor Plan did not envisage this occurring within the next 20 years, work was completed in February 2011.
The following stations have also been proposed, but not approved:
There have also been proposals to close either Redwood or Takapu Road, and either Pukerua Bay or Muri, [33] to reduce transit times by reducing the number of stops. The suggestions were not included in the Plan, but Muri station was closed on 30 April 2011.
Greater Wellington's Hutt Corridor Plan calls for it to "[d]esign and implement extension of electrification and services northward beyond Upper Hutt, including new stations at Timberlea and Cruickshank Road." These stations are not planned for construction until after 2016. A branch line to Wainuiomata has been proposed as recently as the 1970s, but is not planned.
The Kāpiti Coast District, is a local government district of the Wellington Region in the lower North Island of New Zealand, 50 km north of Wellington City. The district is named after Kapiti Island, a prominent island 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) offshore.
Tranz Metro was a New Zealand public transport operator. Beginning as the New Zealand Railways Corporation's Cityline division as a result of restructuring in the 1980s, in its final form Tranz Metro was the operator of Metlink's suburban trains owned by the Greater Wellington Regional Council in the Wellington Region of New Zealand.
Public transport in the Wellington Region, branded under the name Metlink, is the public transport system serving Wellington and its surrounding region. It is the most used public transport system in New Zealand per capita, and consists of electric and diesel buses, suburban trains, ferries and a funicular. It also included trams until 1964, and trolleybuses until 2017.
The New Zealand DM/D class electric multiple unit were a type of electric multiple units used on the suburban rail network of Wellington, New Zealand. Formed of DM power cars and D trailer cars, the first units were ordered from English Electric in 1936 and introduced on 2 July 1938 operating the electrified Johnsonville Line service. Additional units were ordered in 1942 for the line, and in 1946 as the other Wellington suburban lines were to be electrified.
The New Zealand EM/ET class electric multiple units were used on suburban services in Wellington, New Zealand from 1982 to 2016. They were owned initially by the New Zealand Railways Corporation and finally by the Greater Wellington Regional Council (GWRC) and operated by Tranz Metro, part of national railway operator KiwiRail.
The 8.38 miles (13.49 km) Tawa Flat deviation is a double-track section of the Kapiti Line just north of Wellington, New Zealand with two tunnels; the southernmost section of the North Island Main Trunk railway (NIMT) between Wellington and Auckland. It was built to bypass a limited capacity single track section of the original Wellington and Manawatu Railway (WMR) line which ascended from Wellington to Johnsonville and then descended to Tawa Flat. The original name of Tawa Flat was changed to Tawa in 1959.
Metlink's Kapiti Line is the electrified southern portion of the North Island Main Trunk railway between New Zealand's capital city, Wellington, and Waikanae on the Kāpiti Coast, operated by Transdev Wellington on behalf of Greater Wellington Regional Council. Trains run frequently every day, with stops at 16 stations. Until 20 February 2011 it was known as the Paraparaumu Line.
The Hutt Valley Line is the electrified train service operated by Transdev Wellington on behalf of Metlink on the section of the Wairarapa Line railway between Wellington and Upper Hutt, New Zealand.
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, since that year the two being joined by the Onehunga Branch and later by the Manukau Branch.
The Gracefield Branch is a 1.6 km long, 3 ft 6 in gauge industrial line from its junction with the Wairarapa Line at Woburn in the Wellington region of New Zealand's North Island to its terminus at the southern end of the Hutt Workshops yard. The line formerly included an additional kilometre of track to Gracefield Freight Terminal, where it connected to a network of industrial sidings in nearby Seaview. Currently its only function is to provide access to the Hutt Workshops.
The Wellington and Manawatu Line is an unofficial name for the section of New Zealand's North Island Main Trunk Railway between Wellington and Palmerston North. Originally a government project, the line was constructed by the private Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company and bought by the government in December 1908.
Takapu Road railway station is on the suburban rail network of Wellington, New Zealand, on the Kapiti section of the North Island Main Trunk Railway (NIMT). It is double tracked with side platforms. It serves the suburbs of Redwood and Grenada North, and the rural Takapu Valley.
Redwood railway station on the suburban rail network of Wellington, New Zealand, is on the North Island Main Trunk Railway (NIMT). Opening in late 1963, it is double tracked with staggered side platforms; the up platform is on the north side of the Tawa Street level crossing, the down platform on the south. The station serves the suburb of Redwood.
The New Zealand FP/FT "Matangi" class is a class of electric multiple units used on the suburban rail network of New Zealand's capital city, Wellington. The class, consisting of an FP power car and an FT trailer car, operates services on all electrified lines of the network which comprise the Kapiti, Hutt Valley, Melling and Johnsonville lines. The units are owned by Greater Wellington Rail Ltd, a subsidiary of the Greater Wellington Regional Council (GWRC), and have been operated by Transdev Wellington under contract to the GWRC since 2016. They were previously operated by Tranz Metro, a former division of KiwiRail.
Paekakariki railway station in Paekākāriki on the Kāpiti Coast, New Zealand, is an intermediate station on the Kapiti Line for Metlink's electric multiple unit commuter trains from Wellington. Paekākāriki was the terminal station of the commuter service from 1940 to 1983, when the service was extended to Paraparaumu, and to Waikanae in 2011.
Western Hutt railway station, formerly Lower Hutt, is an intermediate station on the single-track Melling Line in Lower Hutt, New Zealand, It is served by Metlink electric multiple unit trains operated by Transdev Wellington under the Metlink brand.
Otaihanga railway station was a flag station between Paraparaumu and Waikanae on the Wellington-Manawatu Line in New Zealand, when the line was run by the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company. This line is now part of the Kapiti section of the North Island Main Trunk.
The Haywards–Plimmerton Line was a railway development proposed several times between 1879 and the 1960s to connect the Hutt Valley and Porirua areas of Wellington via Haywards.
Railway electrification in New Zealand consists of three separate electric systems, all on the North Island. Electrification was initially adopted by the New Zealand Railways for long tunnels; the Otira Tunnel, the Lyttelton Rail Tunnel and the two Tawa Tunnels of the Tawa Flat Deviation. Electrification of Wellington suburban services started with the Johnsonville Line and Kapiti Line out of Wellington from the 1930s. Auckland suburban services were electrified in 2014–2015. Electrification of long-distance services on the North Island Main Trunk (NIMT) dates from 1986. New long tunnels, for example the Rimutaka Tunnel and the Kaimai Tunnel, were operated by diesels, and the Otira and Lyttelton Tunnels have converted to diesel operation.
The North–South Junction is a section of single-track rail line about 7 km long, north of Wellington, New Zealand between the closed (2011) Muri railway station and the (lower) Paekakariki railway station to the north. It is part of the Kapiti Line section of the North Island Main Trunk line between Wellington and Auckland, and part of the Wellington–Manawatu Line, built by the Wellington & Manawatu Railway Company (WMR).
The future of extra stations at Lindale and Raumati will be determined after 2010 when the benefits of the first tranche of work and subsequent travel patterns are established.