Paremata railway station facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Paremata
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Metlink suburban rail | |||||||||||
Location | State Highway 1, Paremata, Porirua, New Zealand | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 41°06′22.75″S 174°51′58.75″E / 41.1063194°S 174.8663194°E | ||||||||||
Owned by | Greater Wellington Regional Council | ||||||||||
Line(s) | North Island Main Trunk | ||||||||||
Platforms | Island Platform | ||||||||||
Tracks | Mainline (2) | ||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||
Structure type | Shelter | ||||||||||
Parking | Yes | ||||||||||
Bicycle facilities | Yes | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 21 September 1885 | ||||||||||
Rebuilt | 1960 | ||||||||||
Electrified | 1940 | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Paremata railway station on the Kapiti Line section of the North Island Main Trunk Railway (NIMT) in Paremata in the city of Porirua, New Zealand, is part of the Wellington Region's Metlink suburban rail network.
It is double tracked with an island platform. It has subway access to a Park and Ride to the south-east, which includes a bus stop and an overbridge across State Highway 1 to Paremata's southern commercial centre, Paremata School, and the nearby residential areas. From the south end of the station, another pedestrian overbridge leads across the state highway to the western end of Paremata Crescent, giving access to the adjoining Papakowhai suburb.
Services
Paremata is the first station north of Porirua on the Kapiti Line for commuter trains operated by Transdev Wellington under the Metlink brand under contract with the Greater Wellington Regional Council. Services between Wellington and Porirua or Waikanae are operated by electric multiple units of the FT/FP class (Matangi). Two diesel-hauled carriage trains, the Capital Connection and the Northern Explorer, pass through the station but do not stop.
All suburban services running between Wellington and Plimmerton or Waikanae stop at Paremata. Off-peak trains stop at all stations between Wellington and Waikanae. During peak periods, some trains from Wellington that stop at all stations may terminate at Porirua and return to Wellington while a number of peak services run express or non-stop between Wellington and Porirua before stopping at all stations from Porirua to Waikanae. Plimmerton is the northern terminus for some peak period trains which terminate at Plimmerton and return to Wellington.
Travel times by train are thirty-five minutes to Waikanae, four minutes to Porirua, twenty-five minutes to Wellington for trains stopping at all stations, and twenty-one minutes for express trains that do not stop between Porirua and Wellington.
Trains run every twenty minutes during daytime off-peak hours, more frequently during peak periods, and less frequently at night. Before July 2018, off-peak passenger train services between Wellington and Waikanae ran every thirty minutes but were increased to one every twenty minutes from 15 July 2018.
KiwiRail Scenic long-distance trains and diesel hauled KiwiRail freight trains pass by the station but do not stop.
History
The line was originally part of the Wellington - Manawatu Line built by the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company (WMR). The line to Paremata station, which was close to the Paremata Barracks ruins, was opened on 21 September 1885, without ceremony. The first train with 59 people aboard had three composite coaches and a van. Cobb & Co built stables at Paremata, and from October 1885 an early train leaving town at 7 a.m. made it possible to travel from Wellington to Wanganui in one day by rail and coach. The line was extended to Plimmerton in October, and Pukerua Bay by the end of the year. The line was extended to Paekakariki in 1886, and was electrified (with locomotive-hauled carriage trains) in 1940 after the opening of the Tawa Flat deviation.
Double tracking north to Mana was opened on 7 November 1960, and the original station built in 1885 by the WMR was replaced by a new one across on south side of the Pauatahanui Inlet entrance. The original station yard had a large freight shed built in World War II for the American forces in the district, but postwar there was little freight traffic, and the yard was not replaced. The new station on reclamation for the new bridge embankment was nearly ten feet higher than the old yard.