Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1950, L/P class tram 154 was the first of Sydney's trams (and first in Australia) to be preserved the fledgling Australian Electric Traction Association, later known as the Sydney Tramway Museum, beginning the preservation of nearly every class of tram. The collection of preserved trams has grown to include the last known examples of some ...
The Sydney light rail network (or Sydney Light Rail for the inner-city lines) [4] is a light rail/tram system serving the city of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The network consists of four passenger routes, the L1 Dulwich Hill , L2 Randwick, L3 Kingsford and L4 Westmead & Carlingford lines.
Extended over new Sydney Harbour Bridge to underground terminal at Wynyard station, Sydney, 20 March 1932. ♦ Parramatta – Castle Hill Steam 18 August 1902 31 December 1926 ♦♦ Parramatta (Wharf) Steam 1 October 1883 31 March 1943 Last steam tramway in Sydney area. ♦ Rockdale – Brighton-le-Sands Steam 9 November 1885 1900 Electric
Former Railway Square tram stop re-erected at the Sydney Tramway Museum in July 2016 Royal National Park line in April 2020. Construction of the museum at its original site on the edge of the Royal National Park commenced in August 1956. [1] It was officially opened in March 1965 by NSW Deputy Premier Pat Hills. The facilities were basic ...
Built to service the new electric tram fleet, the former Tram Depot at Newtown is of state historical significance for its association with the replacement of steam trams with electric traction in Sydney in 1899. Opened in 1900 the tram depot was the second built of the tram depots in NSW and together with the adjacent Newtown Railway Station ...
In 1935, the shuttle tram to La Perouse ceased, but from 1934, some trams ran past Botany to Matraville (terminus at Military Road, Matraville). [53] (Name is no longer used, and the arrangement of the roads in the area is now significantly different around the former site of the tramway.) Steyne Junction [2] North Steyne to Raglan Street, Manly
The Sydney light rail system has four lines. [1] [2] The system is owned by the Government of New South Wales. The first three lines are operated under contract by Transdev Sydney, [3] while the L4 Westmead & Carlingford Line is operated by Great River City Light Rail, a joint venture between Transdev and CAF. [4] [5]
Sydney Tram Classification; Sydney Tramway Museum This page was last edited on 15 January 2020, at 13:38 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...