Westona railway station

Coordinates: 37°51′54″S 144°48′49″E / 37.8651°S 144.8135°E / -37.8651; 144.8135
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Westona
PTV commuter rail station
Station building and entrance, June 2005
General information
LocationHarrington Street,
Altona, Victoria 3018
City of Hobsons Bay
Australia
Coordinates37°51′54″S 144°48′49″E / 37.8651°S 144.8135°E / -37.8651; 144.8135
Owned byVicTrack
Operated byMetro Trains
Line(s)Werribee
Distance18.53 kilometres from
Southern Cross
Platforms2 (1 island)
Tracks2
ConnectionsList of bus routes in Melbourne Bus
Construction
Structure typeGround
Parking80
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes—step free access
Other information
StatusOperational, unstaffed
Station codeWTO
Fare zoneMyki Zone 1/2 overlap
WebsitePublic Transport Victoria
History
Opened21 January 1985; 39 years ago (1985-01-21)
ElectrifiedJanuary 1985
(1500 V DC overhead)
Passengers
2005–2006268,293[1]
2006–2007296,515[1]Increase 10.51%
2007–2008316,372[1]Increase 6.69%
2008–2009349,476[2]Increase 10.46%
2009–2010350,423[2]Increase 0.27%
2010–2011309,620[2]Decrease 11.64%
2011–2012245,212[2]Decrease 20.8%
2012–2013Not measured[2]
2013–2014227,635[2]Decrease 7.16%
2014–2015229,932[1]Increase 1%
2015–2016238,575[2]Increase 3.75%
2016–2017236,790[2]Decrease 0.74%
2017–2018240,157[2]Increase 1.42%
2018–2019240,150[2]Decrease 0.002%
2019–2020212,000[2]Decrease 11.72%
2020–2021107,350[2]Decrease 49.36%
2021–2022137,950[3]Increase 28.5%
Services
Preceding station Railways in Melbourne Metro Trains Following station
Laverton
towards Werribee
Werribee line Altona
Track layout
Grieve Parade
1
2
Maidstone Street
Kayes Drain

Westona railway station is located on the Werribee line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the western Melbourne suburb of Altona, and opened on 21 January 1985.[4][5]

Westona is a crossing loop in the middle of a 10-kilometre-long section of single track between Altona Junction and Laverton. The direction in which trains cross at Westona is unusual for Melbourne, in that they pass each other on the left, rather than passing on the more common right.[4]

History[edit]

In 1965, the Victorian Parliament passed the Altona Railway Extension Act, which authorised a 1-mile (1.6 km) extension of the Altona railway, west to Maidstone Street.[6] Despite a sign being erected on the future site of Westona station, proclaiming that a railway was to be built to there, nothing was done for almost two decades.

Westona station opened on 21 January 1985, when the railway line from Altona was extended.[4][7] After opening, the station was briefly the terminus of the line, with the up face of the island platform (Platform 1) only in use.[5] On 14 April of that year, the track to Laverton was opened.[4] The station was named by Joanna O'Connor, Alan Angus and Betty Angus, who won a council-run contest to find a name. Because the new station was west of Altona, they suggested Westona.[8]

In 1986, control of all signals and points was transferred to the Newport signal box, with the signal control panel moved to the relay room for maintenance purposes only.[9]

Platforms and services[edit]

Westona has one island platform with two faces. It is served by Werribee line trains.[10]

Platform 1:

Platform 2:

Transport links[edit]

CDC Melbourne operates one bus route via Westona station, under contract to Public Transport Victoria:

  •  415 : Laverton stationWilliamstown[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Estimated Annual Patronage by Network Segment Financial Year 2005-2006 to 2018-19 Department of Transport
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Railway station and tram stop patronage in Victoria for 2008-2021 Philip Mallis
  3. ^ Annual metropolitan train station patronage (station entries) Data Vic
  4. ^ a b c d "Westona". Vicsig. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Westona Station". Rail Geelong. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  6. ^ "Altona Railway Extension Act 1965". Victorian Historical Acts. Australasian Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 29 June 2023.
  7. ^ Harrington, Tony (22 January 1985). "Western suburbs get new station, lose three others". The Age. p. 5.
  8. ^ Byrne, Bridie (16 September 2008). "Diamond Day". Williamstown, Altona, Laverton Star. Retrieved 15 February 2013. [dead link]
  9. ^ "Works". Newsrail. Australian Railway Historical Society. March 1987. p. 89.
  10. ^ "Werribee Line". Public Transport Victoria.
  11. ^ "415 Laverton Station - Williamstown via Altona". Public Transport Victoria.

External links[edit]