Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Town Hall railway station, Sydney
Heritage-listed railway station in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Town Hall railway station is a heritage-listed[1] underground suburban rail station located in the centre of the Sydney central business district in New South Wales, Australia. The station opened on 28 February 1932.[4] It is named after the Sydney Town Hall, located directly above the station.
Remove ads
Remove ads
History


The station is built on the site of Sydney's earliest colonial cemetery, the Old Sydney Burial Ground.[5][6][7] In 2008, part of this cemetery was being excavated from under the Town Hall.
The station opened on 28 February 1932[1][8] and was built with six platforms, which were split over two levels with three platforms on each level. When the station opened, only four of the platforms were in use: platforms 1, 2 and 3 on the upper level and platform 6, served by escalators, on the lower level.[9] The other two platforms were built in preparation for a proposed western suburbs line from the city to Gladesville, as envisaged under the Bradfield scheme.[9] This line was never built, and the platforms (4 and 5) remained disused until incorporated into the Eastern Suburbs line when it opened in June 1979.
The station concourse had a major restructure in 2005 when the shops inside were closed to make way for the increasing crowds.
During a refurbishment of the station in 2014, a sign pointing to an air-raid shelter was uncovered on a staircase leading to Platforms 1 and 2. It has been encased in a Perspex casing.[10]
Remove ads
Station configuration
Summarize
Perspective
Town Hall has two platform levels, each with three platforms – physically two island platforms, but set up so that one faces two tracks and the other faces the other track. Each platform has one lift in the centre connecting the concourse with the platforms, providing Easy Access for wheelchairs. These facilities were constructed in 1999. The lower-level platforms (4 to 6) have 4 escalators to the concourse. As the platform is not wide enough, the escalators are in a cross configuration, with two at either end of the platform and another two at the centre. The escalator directions can be changed by staff throughout the day as the passenger flow dictates. The upper-level platforms have stairs up to the concourse. There are also small staircases linking the two platform levels.
The concourse is above the two platform levels and immediately below street level. The station is linked to nearby shopping centres including the Queen Victoria Building, The Galeries, Town Hall Square, Pavilion Plaza and, Woolworths Supermarket. There are also several exits up to each side of George Street.
Opened in 2024, the Sydney Metro line includes another station located at Gadigal.[11]
Remove ads
Platforms and services

Platform | Line | Stopping pattern | Notes |
1 | services to Homebush, Parramatta & Leppington | [12] | |
---|---|---|---|
services to Liverpool via Lidcombe and Regents Park | [13] | ||
2 | services to Penrith, Richmond & Emu Plains | 6 weekday morning peak NSW TrainLink services to Blacktown[14] | |
services to Epping & Hornsby via Strathfield | [15] | ||
3 | services to Lindfield, Gordon, Hornsby & Berowra via Chatswood | 3 weekday evening peak NSW TrainLink services to Gosford 3 weekday evening peak NSW TrainLink services to Wyong[16][17] |
|
services to Gordon via Chatswood | [15] | ||
4 | services to Cronulla, Waterfall & Helensburgh | [18] | |
Limited services to Wollongong, Dapto or Kiama | [19] | ||
5 | services to Bondi Junction | [18] | |
Limited services to Bondi Junction or Martin Place | [19] | ||
6 | services to Sydenham 2 weekday evening services to Campbelltown |
[20] | |
services to Revesby & Macarthur via Airport stations | [21] |
Transport links
Summarize
Perspective
Light rail services
Above the underground concourse on George Street is the Town Hall light rail stop, which is the serviced by the L2 Randwick and L3 Kingsford lines.[22]
Bus services
Town Hall station is served by bus routes operated by Busways, CDC NSW, Keolis Downer Northern Beaches, Transdev John Holland and Transit Systems, under contract to Transport for NSW.
Stand A, QVB:
- 311: to Central Belmore Park
- 324: to Watsons Bay via Old South Head Road
- 325: to Watsons Bay via Vaucluse
Stand B, QVB:
- 437: to Five Dock
- 441: to Birchgrove
- 442: to Balmain East wharf
Stand C, QVB:
- 607X: to Bella Vista via Lane Cove Tunnel & M2 Motorway
- 610X: to Castle Hill via Lane Cove Tunnel & M2 Motorway
Stand D, QVB:
- 100: to Taronga Zoo
- 120: to Chatswood via Willoughby
- 441: to Art Gallery of New South Wales
Stand G, Park Street
- 311: to Eddy Avenue via Potts Point, Kings Cross and Darlinghurst
- 324: to Watsons Bay via Old South Head Road
- 325: to Watsons Bay via Vaucluse
Stand H, Park Street
- 389: to Bondi Junction station
- 441: to Art Gallery of New South Wales
- 500X: to Hyde Park
- 504: to The Domain
- 506: to The Domain
Stand J, Park Street
- 311: to Millers Point
- 324: to Walsh Bay
- 325: to Walsh Bay
- 389: to Australian National Maritime Museum
Stand K, Park Street
- 500X to: to West Ryde station
- 502: to Cabarita wharf
- 504: to Chiswick
- 505: to Woolwich wharf
- 506: to Macquarie University via East Ryde
- 507: to Meadowbank station
Stand L, Druitt Street
- 500X: to West Ryde station
- 502: to Cabarita wharf
- 504: to Chiswick
- 505: to Woolwich wharf
- 506: to Macquarie University via East Ryde
- 507: to Meadowbank station
Remove ads
Trackplan

See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads