Roma Street railway station

Roma Street railway station is located in the Brisbane central business district, Queensland, Australia. It is the junction station for the North Coast, Main, Gold Coast and NSW North Coast lines. The station is one of four inner city stations that form a core corridor through the centre of Brisbane.[1]

Roma Street
Roma Street station as seen from upper Albert Street
General information
LocationRoma Street, Brisbane
Australia
Coordinates27°27′55″S 153°01′09″E / 27.4652°S 153.0191°E / -27.4652; 153.0191
Owned byQueensland Rail
Operated byQueensland Rail
Line(s)North Coast
Main Line
Gold Coast
NSW North Coast
Distance0.75 kilometres from Central
Platforms10 (4 side, 3 islands)
Tracks10
ConnectionsRoma Street busway station
Construction
Structure typeGround (Terraced)
AccessibleYes
Other information
StatusStaffed
Station code600037 (platform 2)
600033 (platform 3)
600036 (platform 4)
600034 (platform 5)
600030 (platform 6)
600028 (platform 7)
600029 (platform 8)
600038 (platform 9)
600035 (platform 10)
Fare zonego card Zone 1
WebsiteQueensland Rail
History
Opened14 June 1875; 148 years ago (1875-06-14)
ElectrifiedYes
Previous namesBrisbane
Passengers
2022-231,780,252
Rank3
Services
Preceding stationQueensland Rail Queensland RailFollowing station
through to Gold Coast LineAirport LineCentral
Central
towards Bowen Hills
Beenleigh LineSouth Brisbane
towards Beenleigh
through to Ipswich & Rosewood LineCaboolture LineCentral
towards Caboolture
Central
towards Bowen Hills
Cleveland LineSouth Brisbane
towards Cleveland
TerminusDoomben LineCentral
towards Doomben
Exhibition
Exhibition Line
Bi-directional loop
Central
through to Beenleigh LineFerny Grove LineCentral
towards Ferny Grove
Central
towards Bowen Hills
Gold Coast LineSouth Brisbane
Ipswich & Rosewood LineMilton
towards Ipswich or Rosewood
through to Springfield LineRedcliffe Peninsula LineCentral
towards Kippa-Ring
through to Cleveland LineShorncliffe LineCentral
towards Shorncliffe
Central
towards Bowen Hills
Springfield LineMilton
through to Ipswich & Rosewood LineSunshine Coast LineCentral
Long distance services
Preceding stationQueensland Rail Queensland RailFollowing station
TerminusSpirit of QueenslandCaboolture
towards Cairns
Electric Tilt TrainCaboolture
towards Rockhampton
Spirit of the OutbackCaboolture
towards Longreach
The WestlanderCorinda
towards Charleville
Interstate Services
Preceding station NSW TrainLinkFollowing station
TerminusNSW TrainLink North Coast Line
Sydney XPT
Kyogle
towards Sydney

Although not easily visible to the public, the original 1873 Roma Street railway station building still exists within the modern complex and is listed on the Queensland Heritage Register.[2]

History

1800s to 1940s

The station in 1883

The construction of a railway station on Roma Street was part of a plan to extend the Main Line to Brisbane. An iron station building designed by Sir Charles Fox & Sons was to be imported from the United Kingdom for this purpose, but economic problems in Queensland led to the order being cancelled. In 1873, the Superintendent of Public Buildings Francis Stanley designed a smaller station for the site, with construction beginning in the same year under John Petrie. The station was officially opened on 14 June 1875 as Brisbane at the same time that the Main Line opened to Indooroopilly.[2]

A goods and carriage shed were added shortly after. In 1882, Roma Street became a junction station with the North Coast line opening to Sandgate.[3] With the opening of Central station as Brisbane's principal station on 18 August 1889, the station was renamed Roma Street. As traffic grew, so did the Roma Street precinct with a locomotive shed added.[2]

In 1911, the precinct was rearranged with the locomotive and carriage sheds relocated to Mayne near Bowen Hills.

On 30 November 1940, Roma Street again became the principal station for long-distance services with new platforms built to the south of the existing platforms.[2][4]

1970s to early 2000s

Roma Street station in 1983, prior to its expansion

Following the opening of the Merivale Bridge on 18 November 1978, Roma Street was also served by Beenleigh line services. On 21 June 1986, it became a dual gauge station with the extension of the standard gauge NSW North Coast line from South Brisbane.[2][5] In October 1986, the Brisbane Transit Centre opened to the south of the station.

As part of the quadruplication of the North Coast line to Bowen Hills, the station was rebuilt. On 1 November 1995, a new Platform 10 was opened on the station's north side as the platform for long-distance services; these services had previously used Platforms 2 and 3.[6] Platforms 7, 8 and 9 opened on 11 June 1996[7] while refurbished Platforms 4, 5 and 6 reopened in January 1997.[8]

In 2001, Roma Street Parkland opened to the north of the station on the site of the former Roma Street goods yards.[9] Visitors not travelling on Queensland Rail services can obtain a free pass to transit through the station concourse from Roma Street to the parklands.

Platform 1 became part of the Roma Street busway station on 19 May 2008, with the construction of the Inner Northern Busway.[10]

Cross River Rail and Brisbane Metro Projects

The original station building

Roma Street Station will be affected by both the Cross River Rail and Brisbane Metro projects.

The Brisbane Transit Centre complex was planned to be demolished in 2020.[11] Businesses in the existing buildings were closed down between late 2018 and early 2019, with reports of controversy surrounding claims for compensation by small business tenants.[12]

According to the Cross River Rail Construction plan, new underground platforms will be constructed to service Cross River Rail services.[13] The next stations for the Cross River Rail services will be Albert Street (southbound) and Exhibition (northbound).

The proposed Brisbane Metro Line 1 services will terminate at Roma Street Station, with the previous station being King George Square. Brisbane Metro Line 2 services will continue through Roma Street following the existing Northern Busway route, with the next stations being Normanby (northbound) and King George Square (southbound).[14]

Due to the anticipated demolition of the Brisbane Transit Centre, a temporary long-distance bus terminal was constructed on the opposite side of Roma Street Station (near Platform 10) and opened in September 2019.[15]

The Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) Else broke through into the new Roma Street station cavern on the 6 August 2021.[16] The second one, TBM Merle, arrived on 23 August 2021.[16]

Services

Roma Street station is served by all suburban and interurban City network lines.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]

It is also the terminus station for long-distance Traveltrain services[28][29][30][31] and NSW TrainLink's service to Sydney.[32] A motorail loading dock is located on Platform 10.[33]

Services by platform

PlatformLinesDestinationsNotes
1Roma Street BuswayBus platforms
2Not used for regularly timetabled services
3NSW TrainLink North CoastSydney Central1 daily NSW TrainLink XPT service[32]
4BeenleighBeenleigh, Kuraby & Coopers Plains[34]
Gold CoastVarsity Lakes
5BeenleighBeenleigh[35]
ClevelandCleveland
6BeenleighBeenleigh & Ferny Grove[36]
DoombenDoomben
Airport & Gold CoastBrisbane Airport Domestic & Varsity Lakes
ShorncliffeShorncliffe
7Ferny GroveFerny Grove[37]
CabooltureCaboolture
DoombenDoomben
AirportBrisbane Airport Domestic
ShorncliffeShorncliffe
Sunshine CoastGympie North
8Ipswich & RosewoodIpswich & Rosewood[38]
SpringfieldSpringfield Central
9CabooltureCaboolture[39]
Redcliffe PeninsulaKippa-Ring
Sunshine CoastNambour and Gympie North
10
Traveltrain
Spirit of Queensland to and from Cairns[28]
Spirit of the Outback to and from Longreach[29]
Tilt Train to and from Bundaberg & Rockhampton[30]
The Westlander to and from Charleville[31]

Transport links

Adjacent to the station lies the Roma Street busway station that is served by the buses of Transport for Brisbane, Crisps Coaches, Bus Queensland, Greyhound Australia, Murrays, NSW TrainLink and Premier Motor Service long-distance coach services.

References

External links