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Waterloo Interchange (Hutt Central) Railway Station

Waterloo Interchange (Hutt Central)
Metlink suburban rail
Waterloo railway station 01.JPG
Location Cambridge Terrace, Waterloo, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
Coordinates 41°12′49.77″S 174°55′15.95″E / 41.2138250°S 174.9210972°E / -41.2138250; 174.9210972
Owned by Greater Wellington Regional Council
Line(s) Wairarapa Line
Platforms Dual, side
Tracks Main line (2)
Connections Bus services
Construction
Parking Yes
Bicycle facilities Yes
Other information
Station code WATE
Fare zone 4
History
Opened 26 May 1927
Rebuilt 26 November 1988
Electrified 12 September 1953
Previous names Waterloo
Services
  ONTRACK  
Preceding station   Tranz Metro   Following station
toward Upper Hutt
Hutt Valley Line
toward Wellington
toward Masterton
Wairarapa Connection
toward Wellington

Waterloo Interchange railway station is a dual-platform suburban railway station located in Lower Hutt, New Zealand, serving the suburbs of Waterloo, New Zealand, Lower Hutt Central and Woburn. Despite being signposted as Hutt Central, the official NZ Geographic Board name for this station is still Waterloo.The station is located on the Hutt Valley section of the Wairarapa Line, 15.5 km (9.6 mi) north of Wellington, and is served by Transdev Wellington on behalf of the Greater Wellington Regional Council. Trains stopping at Waterloo run to Wellington, Taita, Upper Hutt and Masterton. Waterloo serves as a major bus-rail interchange, connecting buses from central Lower Hutt and Wainuiomata with trains to and from Wellington.

Two major reasons were the impetus for the construction of the Hutt Valley Branch between Petone and Waterloo: first, the Petone Workshops had reached the end of their useful life; second, with increasing traffic demands on the line between Petone and Haywards and the lack of room to double-track the line on its existing route meant a new main line had to be built. The line was surveyed between 1924 and 1925, with a short industrial branch leaving the Hutt Valley Branch at Woburn to serve the new Hutt Workshops. On 26 May 1927 the rails reached Waterloo, which was then in the middle of open fields. This station was the terminus of the Hutt Valley Branch line until an extension north to Naenae was opened in 1946. The station was opened with automatic, three-aspect colour light signals which had been standard since 1924.

It was always intended that Waterloo would one day serve a major population centre which, in the years following World War II and the population boom that ensued, was proved correct. Significant urban development of the Hutt Valley in the 1940s led to the decision in February 1946 to commence electrification in 1949 and to operate electric train between Waterloo and Wellington from August 1953. Until the connection of the Hutt Valley Branch to the Wairarapa Line and its opening as the new main line on 1 March 1954, Waterloo served only suburban passenger services, with Upper Hutt and Wairarapa trains continuing to use the old line between Haywards and Petone on the western side of the Hutt Valley.


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