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Maryborough railway station is a regional railway station on the Mildura line, part of the Victorian railway network. It serves the town of Maryborough, in Victoria, Australia. Maryborough is a ground level premium station, featuring one side platform. It opened on 7 July 1874, with the current station provided in 2010.
The first section of the network opened in 1854, making the Melbourne metropolitan rail network the oldest rail system in Australia. Most of the network is above ground, with the main underground section being the City Loop. [1] These 17 lines consist of 16 electrified lines and 1 diesel shuttle service.
In December 2008 as part of the Victorian Transport Plan the state government announced that V/Line rail passenger services would be extended from Ballarat to Maryborough station at a cost of $50 million, [19] commencing 25 July 2010. [20]
The Maryborough–Avoca–Ararat railway is a railway line in western Victoria, Australia. It is one of the few railway lines in the state to have been closed and then reopened. Today it is a standard gauge branch line connecting the Western SG with Bung Bong and Dunolly , running through Maryborough station.
Maryborough railway station may refer to: Maryborough railway station, Queensland; Maryborough railway station, Victoria; Maryborough West railway station, Queensland; Portlaoise railway station, Irish station formerly known as Maryborough
State Library of Queensland, Set 72157669293111130, ID 8847764982, Original title Maryborough Railway Station, ca. 1882 File usage The following page uses this file:
Maryborough West is served by long-distance Traveltrain services; the Spirit of Queensland, [3] Spirit of the Outback [4] and the Tilt Train. [5] A Queensland Rail shuttle bus operates between the station and the former Maryborough station. A connecting road coach service operated by Wide Bay Transit also operates to Hervey Bay. [5]
When the line was extended north to Bundaberg in 1888 it followed this branch line, which meant that the North Coast line later bypassed Maryborough railway station and left it at the end of a dead-end spur. [1] Maryborough railway station yard, 1882. Maryborough railway station became the centre of a busy network of branch lines.