THE GHAN

Route map of the Ghan

Ghan carriage, 4 March 2003.

Ghan at Alice Springs, 12 March 2007.

'The Ghan' is the 48-hour, 2,979-km passenger train operating on the Adelaide-Alice Springs-Darwin 'Central Australian Railway' in Australia. The service's name is an abbreviated version of its previous nickname ''The Afghan Express'', which comes from the Afghan camel trains that trekked the same route before the advent of the railway.

Contents
History
Construction of Alice Springs - Darwin railway
Operations
Incidents
References
External links

History


Original construction was by South Australian Railways as a narrow gauge railway.

January 18 1878: South: Construction from Port Augusta starts

1879: South: Quorn reached

1883: South: Marree reached

1883: North: Construction of northern line from Palmerston (Darwin) starts

1888: North: Pine Creek reached

1891: South: Oodnadatta reached

1910: First promise to complete the line in the Acceptance Act (but no date given)

1926: Line acquired by Commonwealth Railways

1926: North: Katherine reached

1929: North: Birdum reached, terminus at Larrimah

August 6 1929: South: Alice Springs reached, ''the Ghan'' starts running under current name; the northern and southern parts are not connected.
The tortuously curving line was notoriously prone to delays, often caused by flash floods washing away bridges and tracks. A decision was thus made to rebuild the entire line with a straighter alignment some 150 km west of the existing track, this time using standard gauge.
Former railway cottage at Coward Springs


1957: South: Line from Stirling North (near Port Augusta) to Marree rebuilt and connected to Adelaide


★ Some sections of the narrow-gauge line remain in operation as the Pichi Richi Railway

1976: North: line closed

★ October 1980: South: New line from Tarcoola, South Australia (a siding on the Trans-Australian Railway) to Alice Springs opens

★ July 2001: North: Construction of Alice Springs - Darwin line starts

September 17 2003: Darwin reached, the line from Adelaide to Darwin is complete

January 17 2004: First freight train reaches Darwin

February 4 2004: First passenger train reaches Darwin
Arrival of the first Ghan into Darwin

Construction of Alice Springs - Darwin railway

In 2000, the AustralAsia Rail Corporation (a company owned by the Northern Territory and South Australian Governments) awarded the contract to build and operate the Adelaide to Darwin railway line as a Build, Own, Operate and Transfer back (BOOT) project to the Asia Pacific Transport Consortium. The Asia Pacific Transport Consortium contracted FreightLink to implement the project and to operate the railway.
The Australian Government contributed $165 million from the Centenary of Federation Fund, the Northern Territory Government contributed $165 million and the South Australian Government contributed $150 million to the AustralAsia Rail Corporation for the construction of assets by Asia Pacific Transport Consortium and FreightLink that were later leased for a peppercorn rent to FreightLink In addition, the three Governments contributed about $26 million each, a total of $79 million in further funding to support the Asia Pacific Transport Consortium directly, by way of mezzanine debt financing (subordinated debt), equity, and contingent equity.
Old Ghan Locomotive in Marree

Operations


The Ghan runs twice-weekly from Adelaide to Alice Springs, and once or twice a week to Darwin, depending on seasonal traffic and demand - twice-weekly in the current (April 2007–March 2008) timetable.
The Ghan is operated by Great Southern Railway Ltd, part of the Serco Group.

Incidents


On 12 December 2006, the Ghan collided with a truck at a level crossing and derailed 35 km south of Adelaide River in the Northern Territory. Seven of the 11 carriages came off the tracks. One woman was critically injured, other passengers received only minor injuries. The truck driver involved was arrested, according to the NT police.[1]
On 06 August 2007, the Ghan collided with a truck at a level crossing 50 km north of Adelaide in South Australia. 3 Passengers were reported with minor injuries, suffering from shock. The truck driver was temporarily trapped in his vehicle.[2]

References


1. Ghan derailment victim critical
2. Ghan train smashes into truck


★ Rozycki, Jack (Jan–Mar 2003). "The Never Never Line. Australia's biggest project: the Adelaide-Darwin railway". ''Australian Geographic'' 69: 50–67.

External links



The Ghan homepage

History of the line

History of the Adelaide-Darwin Railway

The Ghan ephemera digitised and held by the National Library of Australia

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves