Bridgewater railway line | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Locale | Adelaide, South Australia |
Termini |
Adelaide Bridgewater |
Stations | |
Operation | |
Opened | 1883 |
Closed | 23 September 1987 |
Technical | |
Line length | 37.3 km (23.2 mi) |
Number of tracks | Quadruple Track to Goodwood Single Track to Belair (formerly double track) Closed from Belair (formerly single track) |
The Bridgewater railway line is a former passenger railway service on the Adelaide to Wolseley line in the Adelaide Hills. It was served by TransAdelaide suburban services from Adelaide. In September 1987, the service was curtailed to Belair. In 1995, the line was converted to standard gauge as part of the One Nation infrastructure program, disconnecting these stations from the broad gauge suburban railway system.
The line from Adelaide to Belair/Bridgewater opened in 1883. The Bridgewater line headed east from Belair parallel to the northern side of Belair National Park. The line then turned south through the national park and then turned east again, where the National Park station used to be. It continued east past Long Gully and Nalawort stations to the Upper Sturt station, 28.9 kilometres from Adelaide station. 500m later the track turned north east and continued to Mount Lofty station, 31 km from Adelaide. After that it turned south and reached Heathfield station (33 km), just after the line turned north east. It reached the village of Aldgate just as it passed the Madurta station, then the track reached the Aldgate station (34.5 km). The line continued east, passing the Jibilla and Carripook stations and finally, the line terminated at Bridgewater station, 37.3 km by rail from Adelaide Railway Station.