Description
The most obvious difference between the two station buildings is the cantilever verandah with its scalloped ripple-iron valance and the elegant post-supported one opposite. Similar to the Moonee Ponds and Ascot Vale stations, the station has a hipped roof profile, convex verandah with trellis end filling and numerous eaves brackets completing the Italian influence here and in most other station buildings in the State. Coloured brickwork and the pointed arch at openings lend a medieval time scale. Elevated siting has provided scope for an extensive wall and a piered iron fence to face the plantation reserve below; this appears to be from the 1905 improvements to the complex. The down side station is simply a deep masonry wall, with stone quoining, similar fenestration and domed pylons at each end, injecting the contemporary Edwardian Free-Style element into what was otherwise a matching design to the 1889 station. Basalt rubble garden borders, pepper trees, pitosporum and acanthus are plantings probably synonymous with the 1905 improvements. Similar landscaped track margins occur to the south. The up platform is likely to be the original 1860 basalt coping and walls, whilst the down side probably dates from the 1880s. The signal box has an unusual design and is built in the manner of the nearby station buildings, with polychrome brickwork and a hipped roof form. Three sides of glazing at the upper level are accessed by a cantilevered wrought-iron walkway cum terrace, linked with ground by a timber stair. Detail includes a scalloped eaves valance and saltire-cross panels above the windows. Nearby, a pepper tree adds period to the site. The upside, downside and signal box buildings all form a group and collectively complement the Victorian era buildings in the Bellair Street shopping precinct.History
Kensington station opened on 1 November 1860, just over a week after the railway line to Essendon opened as part of the private Melbourne and Essendon Railway Company. The station closed with the line on 1 July 1864, due to failure to make a profit. The needs of the Newmarket Saleyards and Racecourse, and the increasing difficulties in driving cattle mustered in the north and west of the Colony overland from North Melbourne station, inspired the line's purchase by the Government and its reopening on 9 October 1871. Like the suburb itself, the station was named afterPlatforms and services
Kensington has two side platforms. It is serviced by Metro Trains' Craigieburn line services. Platform 1: * all stations services to Flinders Street Platform 2: * all stations services to CraigieburnTransport links
Transit Systems Victoria operates one route via Kensington station, under contract toGallery
References
External links
*Attribution
{{Public Transport Victoria railway stations, Craigieburn=y, state=collapsed Rail freight terminals in Victoria (state) Railway stations in Australia opened in 1860 Railway stations in the City of Melbourne (LGA)