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  2. Trams in Brisbane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Brisbane

    The Brisbane Tramway Museum Society was formed in 1968 to preserve some of Brisbane's trams. At present the museum has 24 Brisbane trams in its collection, with 6 operational; California type tram 47, Ten Bench tram 65, Baby Dreadnought tram 99, Dropcentre tram 341, Four Motor tram 429, and the last tram built and officially operated in ...

  3. Old Cleveland Road Tramway Tracks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Cleveland_Road_Tramway...

    With the Brisbane City Council's acquisition of the Brisbane tramway network, the upgrading and extension of the system continued. Large numbers of new trams were built and in 1933-34 the Council's distinctive technique of mass concrete tram tracks were first used extensively in Queen Street. Steel ties were used instead of sleepers, with the ...

  4. Trams in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Australia

    A Sydney Light Rail Urbos 3 tram A modern low-floor E class tram, as used on the Melbourne network. The earliest trams in Australia operated in the latter decades of the 19th century, hauled by horses or "steam tram motors" (also known as "steam dummies"). At the turn of the 20th century, propulsion almost universally turned to electrification ...

  5. Transport for Brisbane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_for_Brisbane

    First used as a depot in 1885 when it was the main tram depot for Brisbane's horse tram network. Until 1968, buses shared the depot with trams, the buses being parked along the western (Wickham Street) frontage and north of the tram shed. When the tram shed was demolished, buses were parked where the shed once stood. [citation needed] Milton

  6. Brisbane Tramway Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brisbane_Tramway_Museum

    As at 10 November 2005, the museum has a collection of 25 trams, 24 of which formerly operated on the Brisbane tram network. The 25th tram in the museum's collection ran in Sydney . The museum also has two single-deck Brisbane trolley-buses built on MF2B chassis by Sunbeam of Wolverhampton , England; fleet numbers 1 (of 1951, with a body by ...

  7. Transport in Brisbane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Brisbane

    Historically Brisbane had a network of trolleybuses and trams, both of which were closed in 1969 in favour of an expanded bus fleet. The Brisbane Tramways Trust experimented with providing bus services in the 1920s but these proved impractical due to mechanical unreliability and Brisbane's poor road surface quality.

  8. Brisbane Tramways substations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brisbane_Tramways_substations

    New Farm Powerhouse, as seen from the Brisbane River, 2015. The original Brisbane Powerhouse, located at New Farm was designed by Tramways Department Architect Roy Rusden Ogg and commissioned by the newly formed Greater Brisbane City Council, went into service as the first council-operated power station built in Brisbane in June 1928.

  9. Paddington Tramways Substation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddington_Tramways_Substation

    The spread of the tramways network was a catalyst for residential development in the western suburbs. [1] In 1926 the Greater Brisbane Council, anxious to control the city's electricity supply, decided to build the Brisbane Powerhouse at New Farm, under the supervision of the BCC Tramways Department. Opened on 28 June 1928, New Farm distributed ...