The Johnsonville Branch, also known as the Johnsonville Line, is a commuter
branch line
A branch line is a phrase used in railway terminology to denote a secondary railway line which branches off a more important through route, usually a main line. A very short branch line may be called a spur line.
Industrial spur
An industr ...
railway from the main
Railway Station
Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport that transfers passengers and goods on wheeled vehicles running on rails, which are incorporated in Track (rail transport), tracks. In contrast to road transport, where the ...
of
Wellington
Wellington ( mi, Te Whanganui-a-Tara or ) is the capital city of New Zealand. It is located at the south-western tip of the North Island, between Cook Strait and the Remutaka Range. Wellington is the second-largest city in New Zealand by m ...
, New Zealand to the northern suburb of
Johnsonville via
Ngaio and
Khandallah.
Transdev Wellington operates the trains under contract from the
Greater Wellington Regional Council. In 2001, an estimated 1,043
passengers used the line on a working day.
The line has seven tunnels and eight stations. Four stations (
Crofton Downs,
Awarua Street,
Box Hill, and
Raroa) are on a curve. Before arrival at the Crofton Downs and Awarua Street stations, the onboard announcement adds ''Please mind the gap when exiting the train''. There are three crossing loops: at Ngaio and Khandallah stations and below
Wadestown in the Ngaio Gorge.
History
The line was built in the 1880s as part of the
Wellington-Manawatu railway line constructed by the private
Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company line, to connect
Wellington
Wellington ( mi, Te Whanganui-a-Tara or ) is the capital city of New Zealand. It is located at the south-western tip of the North Island, between Cook Strait and the Remutaka Range. Wellington is the second-largest city in New Zealand by m ...
to
Longburn near
Palmerston North
Palmerston North (; mi, Te Papa-i-Oea, known colloquially as Palmy) is a city in the North Island of New Zealand and the seat of the Manawatū-Whanganui region. Located in the eastern Manawatu Plains, the city is near the north bank of the ...
where it linked with the
New Zealand Railways network. Construction started in 1879, and the first section, to Paremata, opened on 24 September 1885. The line became part of the
North Island Main Trunk
The North Island Main Trunk (NIMT) is the main railway line in the North Island of New Zealand, connecting the capital city Wellington with the country's largest city, Auckland. The line is long, built to the New Zealand rail gauge of and ser ...
when the government bought the WMR in December 1908.
The line was used by railway workers from the Tarikaka Settlement in
Ngaio, including early shift workers who needed to fire up steam locomotives at the Wellington depot.
Two experimental
RM class railcars were briefly used on the line as NZR sought to develop economically viable railcar technology. The
Westinghouse railcar was introduced in 1914 and served through to 1917. The
Thomas Transmission railcar was introduced in 1916 and operated sporadically into the early 1920s. Both railcars struggled on the steep grades and revealed that further advances were needed to make railcars suitable to New Zealand's conditions. Trains going north often used banking engines on the steep grade from Lambton to Ngaio and sometimes when going south from Johnsonville to Raroa.
The line became a branch when the
Tawa Flat deviation of the NIMT opened to passengers in 1937, and was sometimes called The Hill (in
NZR jargon). The line was electrified at 1500
V DC overhead supply, and the new service with the new
English Electric
N.º UIC: 9094 110 1449-3 (Takargo Rail)
The English Electric Company Limited (EE) was a British industrial manufacturer formed after the Armistice of 11 November 1918, armistice of World War I by amalgamating five businesses which, during t ...
DM/D class electric multiple units service started from Monday 4 July 1938, after an opening ceremony on 2 July. The units normally operated as two-car motor/trailer sets, or four-car sets in peak hours. Additional
DM/D class units were ordered for the line in 1942 and supplied in 1946.
The line was terminated in
Johnsonville, about 100 m beyond the end of the current line: the
State Highway 1 motorway on-ramp follows the route of the old line. Ngaio and Khandallah stations already had crossing loops, and new stations at Awarua Street and Simla Crescent plus a third crossing loop (without passenger platforms) at
Wadestown between No. 3 and No. 4 tunnels were added. The two new stations had been used by steam trains from 10 January 1938, although only some local trains stopped there (on request). Even with two additional stops the time to Johnsonville was now 19 minutes either way; previously with steam operation trains took 25 minutes up and 21 minutes down.
Stations were added at Raroa (1940), Box Hill (1956) and Crofton Downs (1963).
The line was reviewed in 1984, 1993 and 2006–07 to consider either closing or upgrading it, without any significant changes being made.
Services
A half-hourly service runs daily, augmented to a quarter-hourly service at peak periods.
The line was the first Wellington line to adopt the
Snapper card for fare payments; from 14 November 2021. Commuters "tag" on and off at card readers located on the station platform; the hardware and reader stands etc. were installed from August. The system is a "trial" and will eventually replace paper tickets on other Wellington suburban lines.
The line has been passenger-only since the termination of livestock trains for an abattoir in the Ngauranga Gorge. The livestock were originally driven on foot through Johnsonville streets from a stockyard adjacent to the station, but after protests sidings near Raroa were opened on 2 February 1958. The livestock traffic ceased about 1973, though the sidings at Raroa were not lifted until about 1982. Because of the sharp curves on the line,
EW class electric locomotives were used for livestock trains instead of the earlier
ED class locomotives, which were hard on the track with their long rigid wheelbase. The first through revenue-earning train on the line ran on 30 October 1886 from Longburn to Johnsonville, carrying 355 sheep and 60 head of cattle for the Wellington Meat Preserving Company at Ngauranga.
Infrastructure
The line is
single track through very steep terrain rising 150 m above sea level in its 10 km length, with the highest point (152 m) at the north end of Kaka Tunnel. The
ruling grade is 1 in 36, with long sections from Wellington to Crofton Downs and Khandallah of 1 in 40. There are seven narrow tunnels, six bridges, and three
passing loop
A passing loop (UK usage) or passing siding (North America) (also called a crossing loop, crossing place, refuge loop or, colloquially, a hole) is a place on a single line railway or tramway, often located at or near a station, where trains or ...
s. There are three
level crossing
A level crossing is an intersection where a railway line crosses a road, path, or (in rare situations) airport runway, at the same level, as opposed to the railway line crossing over or under using an overpass
An overpass (called ...
s with half-barriers; at the Simla Crescent and Khandallah stations, and at Fraser Avenue between Khandallah and Raroa stations (the Fraser Avenue crossing was last to get barriers as well as bells, in 2009). There is a private rail crossing to a house immediately south of the Fraser Avenue crossing; and a pedestrian crossing from Burma Road to Poona Street, Khandallah between the Khandallah station and the Rangoon Street road overbridge. Pedestrians can also cross the line at the Ngaio station.
The signals were operated by the trains, a standard SLA Absolute Block System; the first train at a crossing station or siding (Wadestown, Ngaio and Khandallah) claimed the next block (if two arrived simultaneously, the ''up'' train got priority as there was a five-second delay for the ''down'' train). The system was revised in July 1969; the second platform siding at Johnsonville was removed and the goods yard (since removed) became a switch-locked siding. Signal boxes were initially retained at Ngaio and Khandallah. Up to 1984 when the line was truncated and the station was moved to accommodate the mall, the station had two sidings on either side of the station platform and the preferred platform was alternated every 12 hours to equalise usage.
The Wellington City Council let a $1.7m tender to replace the Rangoon Street single-lane overbridge of c1906, which crosses the Johnsonville line, with a two-lane bridge. Work commenced in June 2008 and was completed by December 2008.
Three traction substations along the line take electricity from
Wellington Electricity's 11,000-volt distribution network and transform and rectify it to 1500-volt direct current for the overhead traction lines. The substations are located at Wellington (shared with the Kapiti and Hutt Valley Lines), Ngaio and Khandallah.
The names of the tunnels and their length in feet and metres are:
Upgrade in 2008–2009
Th
North Wellington Public Transport Studyby
GWRC and
WCC considered four options for improved public transport: enhanced rail; bus on street; conversion to a
guided busway; and conversion to
light rail. On 16 November 2006 the GWRC Public Transport Committee and the WCC Strategy & Policy Committee accepted a "Do Minimum" option involving retention of the line and replacement of the current
DM units with the same number of refurbished
EM/ET class (Ganz Mavag) units; this required enlarging the tunnels and increasing platform clearances and lengths. GWRC now only use
Matangi units on this line after the decision to withdraw all Ganz Mavag units in the region from service in favour of a larger order of Matangi units.
GWRC envisaged (2007) that the track through the tunnels would need to be lowered by 120 mm, depending on the new units. Lengthening of passing loops and platforms was also likely to be needed, and the estimated cost was $5 million. A programme of preparatory work for the tunnel upgrading commenced on 7 September 2008 and was completed in February 2009. Construction took place after 20:00 on Sunday – Thursday nights to minimise disruption to commuters, with services being replaced by buses. The seven tunnels were upgraded in January 2009 during a period in which the line was closed to all traffic. The work included:
* lowering the track and widening the side clearances in the seven tunnels
* lengthening the three crossing loops, allowing longer trains
* upgrading platforms by lengthening them and increasing clearances
* increasing clearances under two bridges: Lower a rail bridge in Ngaio Gorge (between tunnels) and lower the level of the track under the
Raroa Station
Raroa railway station, one of eight stations on the Johnsonville Branch (a commuter branch-railway north of Wellington in New Zealand's North Island), serves the suburbs of Raroa and Broadmeadows. It is one of four stations on the line loc ...
footbridge
* new power substation at Ngaio
Upgrade in 2019–2022
Upgrading of the overhead power catenary system with replacement of the remaining one hundred wooden poles by steel poles was completed in 2022. A steel section of the pedestrian overbridge at
Raroa railway station
Raroa railway station, one of eight stations on the Johnsonville Branch (a commuter branch line, branch-railway north of Wellington in New Zealand's North Island), serves the suburbs of Raroa and Broadmeadows, New Zealand, Broadmeadows. It is o ...
was also replaced in Easter 2022 (16-18 April)).
New rolling stock
Due to significant mechanical difficulties being experienced by Tranz Metro in keeping the DM/D EMUs in service, several units were withdrawn from service in February 2012. Buses were added to supplement the remaining service capacity pending the planned introduction of the FT/FP "Matangi" EMUs on 19 March 2012. The first Matangi service was the 11:02 departure from Wellington, which passed the last English Electric service on the line at Ngaio station.
The new Matangi EMUs struggled on the Johnsonville Line with
rail track squeal and to maintain the schedule used for the English Electrics especially in wet conditions. To improve schedule reliability, the Johnsonville Line timetable was initially changed to a longer morning peak journey time of 22 minutes to Wellington and 26 minutes to Johnsonville and it is now 23 minutes and 28 minutes.
Future
The proposed redevelopment of the Johnsonville Town Centre was to include improvements to the rail and bus terminal at Johnsonville; the terminal is now referred to as the ''Johnsonville Hub''.
The Broderick Road overbridge immediately south of the
Johnsonville Railway Station was upgraded by widening and lengthening in 2015 to include cycle lanes and extra road lanes over it.
Provision is made for dual tracks underneath (formerly one track) into the station, as requested by the
Greater Wellington Regional Council for future double-tracking.
Proposed infrastructure upgrades for the line include overhead line and mast replacement, sleeper replacement in tunnels and stabilisation of high risk slopes; to be completed in 2022.
[''Wellington Timetable Changes and Infrastructure Upgrades'' by Bruce Taylor in ''The New Zealand Railway Observer'' June–July 2018 No 349 Volume 75 No 2, pages 62,63]
References
Citations
Bibliography
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External links
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New and old units on the Johnsonville Line, 19 March 2012*
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ttp://valleysignals.org.nz/johnsonville/johnsonville.html Johnsonville Line: Photos, Signalling*
ttp://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/Gov12_06Rail-fig-Gov12_06Rail031b.html Photo of one of the last main line trains to enter Johnsonville c1938from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETCPhoto of arrival of the first unit at Johnsonville 1938from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETCPhoto of Johnsonville units at Wellington station c1939from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETC
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Photo of multiple unit on the line c1940from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETCA flashlight photo of passengers inside a unit c1938from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETCScene from a loco cab running downhill from Johnsonville c1930from The New Zealand Railways Magazine as republished by the
NZETCNorth Wellington Public Transport Study Railways of New Zealand: Wellington & Manawatu Railway''Invitation to Opening'' (NZR Publicity picture)*
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{{coord, 41, 13, 24.01, S, 174, 48, 17, E, display=title
Public transport in the Wellington Region
Buildings and structures in Wellington City
Rail transport in Wellington
Railway lines in New Zealand
Electric railways in New Zealand
3 ft 6 in gauge railways in New Zealand