Macdonaldtown Railway Station
- Weekends and public holidays:
- 585,880 (year)
- 1,605 (daily) (Sydney Trains, NSW TrainLink)
Preceding station | Sydney Trains | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Newtown towards Parramatta or Leppington
|
Inner West & Leppington Line | Redfern towards City Circle
| ||
North Shore & Western Line does not stop here | ||||
Northern Line does not stop here |
Macdonaldtown railway station is located on the Main Suburban line, serving the Sydney suburb of Eveleigh. It is served by Sydney Trains T2 Inner West & Leppington line services.
History
The original Macdonaldtown station opened in 1878 at a site adjacent to the Charles Street subway. It was relocated to its present site on 3 April 1892.
The Main Suburban line through Macdonaldtown was quadruplicated in 1892, and sextuplicated in 1927 in association with electrification works.
An island platform on the middle pair of tracks was taken out of use and demolished in November 1985. The closed access stairs to this may still be seen from the underpass entrance. To the south of the station, lie the Macdonaldtown Stabling Yards. A footbridge that spanned all six lines was removed in June 1996.
On the morning of 13 July 1986 Macdonaldtown station was painted pink by then 18 year-old John Philip Baxter and his 14-year-old brother. Baxter also glued a table, two chairs and a pot-plant (also painted pink) to the platform to further his "overall effort to enhance the station". No conviction was recorded and the State Rail Authority's claim for damages was rejected by the magistrate.
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Westbound view from the island platform
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Entrance from Burren Street underpass
Platforms and services
Platform | Line | Stopping pattern | Notes |
1 | services to Central & the City Circle | ||
---|---|---|---|
2 | services to Homebush & Parramatta |