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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...

    The line ceased operation in 1969 when the entire Brisbane tramway system was closed by the Brisbane City Council. [1] Trams were a feature of the Brisbane cityscape for over eighty years. The first, horse-drawn trams plied their way from North Quay to Breakfast Creek and the Exhibition Building in 1885. Until 1922 the tramway was operated by ...

  4. 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

  5. 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 ...

  6. Transport in Brisbane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Brisbane

    The network has relatively low ridership on a world scale [10] and compared to the city's bus network. [ 12 ] 55 million passenger trips were taken across the network in 2018–19. [ 13 ] In 2020, the pandemic drastically affected passenger numbers with many services, including peak ones, running at 90 per cent empty.

  7. History of trams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_trams

    From 1885 to 1940, the city of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia operated one of the largest cable systems in the world, at its peak running 592 trams on 75 kilometres (47 mi) of track, though during its heyday, Sydney's network was larger, [20] with about 1,600 cars in service at any one time at its peak during the 1930s (cf. about 500 trams in ...

  8. 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 ...

  9. Trolleybuses in Brisbane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trolleybuses_in_Brisbane

    Slow at Frog: A Short History of the Brisbane Trolleybus System. Ferny Grove, Qld: Brisbane Tramway Museum. ISBN 978-0-9597322-2-1. Jones, David (2000). Australian Trolley Buses : the trolley buses that once served Australian cities. Tawa, NZ: City Tramway Publications. ISBN 0-473-07118-5.