Casino railway station

Casino
Northbound view in 1987
Location Canterbury Street, Casino
Coordinates 28°51′40″S 153°02′18″E / 28.861081°S 153.038215°E / -28.861081; 153.038215Coordinates: 28°51′40″S 153°02′18″E / 28.861081°S 153.038215°E / -28.861081; 153.038215
Owned by RailCorp
Operated by NSW TrainLink
Line(s) North Coast
Murwillumbah
Distance 805.07 kilometres from Central
Platforms 1
Tracks 4
Construction
Structure type Ground
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code CSI
History
Opened 22 September 1930
Services
Preceding station   NSW Main lines   Following station
Nammoona
towards Border Loop
North Coast Line
towards Maitland
Preceding station   NSW Closed lines   Following station
towards Murwillumbah
Murwillumbah LineTerminus
Preceding station   NSW TrainLink   Following station
towards Brisbane
NSW TrainLink North Coast
towards Sydney

Casino railway station is located on the North Coast line in New South Wales, Australia. It serves the town of Casino, opening on 22 September 1930.[1] It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.[2]

History

Casino station was built to replace existing Casino station that was renamed Old Casino on the same day, having opened on 19 October 1903 when the Murwillumbah line was extended from Lismore, ultimately reaching Grafton in 1905. As Old Casino was on what would now be a branch line, a new mainline station was built to coincide with the extension of the North Coast line from Kyogle to the Queensland border.[3]

The station originally was an island platform. In October 1990, the eastern platform was decommissioned, later being filled in and redeveloped as a coach stop.[4] The Murwillumbah line branches off immediately North of the station, although it has not been used since 2004, the track is still in place and a short distance at Casino is used for occasional shunting movements.

Casino had a locomotive depot with a roundhouse until it closed on 25 July 1986.[5] It reopened in 1996 when it was leased to Northern Rivers Railroad.[6]

Platforms & services

Casino has one platform with a passing loop. Each day the station is served by a northbound XPT service to Brisbane and a southbound service to Sydney. In addition a daily XPT to/from Sydney terminates at Casino.[7]

NSW TrainLink also operate coach services from the station to Tweed Heads, Robina, Surfers Paradise and Brisbane.[7]

Platform Line Stopping pattern Notes
1 services to Sydney Central & Brisbane

Description

The heritage-listed complex includes a type 13 brick station building with brick platform (completed in 1930), brick refreshment rooms (completed 1930) and a standard 1915 design roundhouse (completed 1933). Structures at the station include the water column in locomotive depot yard, steel water tank with column attached, 75' turntable (completed 1933) and timber and steel 'Harmon' coal stage (completed 1956). A fibro elevated signal box (1946) was demolished in 2012.[2]

Heritage listing

Casino station group is an imposing and significant group of buildings in a major country location. The station building is one of the largest standard buildings and with the adjacent refreshment rooms constructed at the same time form the best surviving later period station groups in the state. The locomotive facilities are of high significance, particularly the timber coal loader, which is the last of several of these unique structures on the rail system.[2]

Casino railway station was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999 having satisfied the following criteria.[2]

The place possesses uncommon, rare or endangered aspects of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales.

This item is assessed as historically rare. This item is assessed as scientifically rare. This item is assessed as arch. rare. This item is assessed as socially rare.[2]

References

  1. Casino Station NSWrail.net
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Casino Railway Station and yard group, New South Wales State Heritage Register (NSW SHR) Number H01111". New South Wales State Heritage Register. Office of Environment and Heritage. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  3. North Coast Line NSWrail.net
  4. "Signalling & Safeworking" Railway Digest December 1990 page 447
  5. "North Coast Report" Railway Digest October 1986 page 322
  6. "The Northern Rivers Railroad" Railway Digest December 1996 page 28
  7. 1 2 "North Coast timetable" (PDF). NSW Trainlink. 26 November 2017.

Attribution

This Wikipedia article was originally based on Casino Railway Station and yard group, entry number 01111 in the New South Wales State Heritage Register published by the State of New South Wales and Office of Environment and Heritage 2018 under CC-BY 4.0 licence, accessed on 2 June 2018.

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