Johnsonville 15 minute peak
trial 20th September 2014
For more information, contact the Greater Wellington Regional Council:
September 2014
www.gw.govt.nz
[email address]
Contents
1.
Johnsonville Trial Plan
1
2.
Operational Setup
2
3.
Actual Trial
2
4.
Outcomes
2
5.
Recommendations
2
1.
Johnsonville Trial Plan
There were two objectives to the trial held on the 20 September 2014. The first was to
investigate the possibility of running 4 trains an hour; this being what is required to
achieve RS1. The second was to try and bring stability to the timetable to allow 100
percent on time performance to 5 minutes.
Three months’ worth of RTI data was used to define the run and dwell times that
reflected reality; the only issue was that the crossover below Wadestown, which isn’t
separated out of the run time, had to be collected manually. Austrics was used to
construct a timetable giving a 15 minute frequency from Johnsonville to Wellington and
at the same time building in 5minutes recovery time at Johnsonville and 7 minutes at
Wellington.
GWRC meet with TranzMetro to discuss the proposal;
developed
modifications that built in recovery times at the crossovers for the trains going against
the peak loading. That is the down trains get priority in the morning peak and the up
trains get priority over the down train in the afternoon peak. The theory was to build
resilience into the timetable.
From the meeting and the revised timetable it was decided to run a trial simulating a
morning peak an off peak and an afternoon peak on a Saturday.
The trip times:
Morning Peak
Up Old
Up New
Down Old
Down New
21mins
22mins
21mins
22mins
21mins
22mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
23mins
21mins
22mins
22mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
24mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
21mins
28mins
21mins
22mins
REPORT JOHNSONVILLE TRIAL 20TH SEPT 2014
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2.
Operational Setup
Briefing was held 5.30am, this explained that there would be 4 car sets running at
15minute intervals from Johnsonville from 6.32am until 9.00am and the out bound units
would be running with recovery time to support.
After 9.00am an off peak timetable would run until 10.47am then a simulated afternoon
peak setting priority to the Wellington to Johnsonville outbound trains.
All stops would stop for 30 seconds to simulate peak passenger loadings and a
supervisor would be on each train, timing to the second to ensure time was kept and
record all times.
3.
Actual Trial
For the trial we had showers at the start which caused the first train up to lose all of the
recovery time on the way up to Johnsonville. The train down left 2 minutes late and
even with priority was 3 minutes late into Wellington, but the next train up departed on
time. We saw the same pattern through the peak with different drivers and bad weather,
in each instance we recovered the lost time.
The off peak started on time and no issues encountered.
The afternoon peak had weather issues but the priority trains ran very well.
4.
Outcomes
The on time performance at 97.5 % in the poor conditions was excellent. The use of
recovery time on the trip with lest priority proved to add stability to the timetable. It
proved that we can run a 15minute peak time service very successfully.
5.
Recommendations
The next steps to ensure a robust process as well as timetable are run another weekend
trial hopefully on a dry day to confirm what we have learnt so far. Secondly a live trial
on Johnsonville peak on a week day.
If the above are successful have a joint plan to implement the new timetable with the
limited EMUs that we have, to establish the pattern and build patronage
6.
A brief History
The line was built in the 1880s as part of the private Wellington and Manawatu Railway
Company line to connect Wellington to Longburn. Construction started in 1879, and the
first section, to Paremata, opened on 24 September 1885. The line became part of
the North Island Main Trunk when the government bought the WMR in December
1908.
The line was used by railway workers from the Tarikaka Settlement in Ngaio, including
early shift workers who needed to fire up steam locomotives at the Wellington depot.
Two experimental RM class railcars were briefly used on the line as NZR sought to
develop economically viable railcar technology. TheWestinghouse railcar was
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REPORT JOHNSONVILLE TRIAL 20TH SEPT 2014
introduced in 1914 and served through to 1917. The Thomas Transmission railcar was
introduced in 1916 and operated sporadically into the early 1920s. Both railcars
struggled on the steep grades and revealed that further advances were needed to make
railcars suitable to New Zealand's conditions.
The line became a branch when the Tawa Flat deviation of the NIMT opened to
passengers in 1937, and was sometimes called The Hill (inNZR jargon). The line was
electrified at 1500 V DC overhead supply, and the first passenger train using the
new English Electric DM/D classelectric multiple units ran on 2 July 1938. The units
normal operate as two-car motor/trailer sets, four-car sets in peak hours.
AdditionalDM/D class units were ordered for the line in 1942 and supplied in 1946.
The line was terminated in Johnsonville, about 100 m beyond the end of the current
line: the State Highway 1 motorway on-ramp follows the route of the old line. Ngaio
and Khandallah stations already had crossing loops, and a third crossing loop (without
platform) at Wadestownplus new stations at Awarua Street and Simla Crescent were
added.
Stations were added at Raroa (1940), Box Hill (1956) and Crofton Downs (1963). The
line has four stations, Crofton Downs, Awarua Street,Box Hill, and Raroa on a curve.
The line was reviewed in 1984, 1993 and 2006–07 to consider either closing or
upgrading it, without any significant changes being made.
Services
A half-hourly service runs daily, augmented to a 13/13/26-minute pattern at peak
periods.
The line has been passenger-only since the termination of livestock trains for an abattoir
in the Ngauranga Gorge. The livestock were originally driven on foot through
Johnsonville streets, but after protests sidings near Raroa were opened on 2 February
1958. The livestock traffic ceased about 1973, though the sidings at Raroa were not
lifted until about 1982. Because of the sharp curves on the line, EW class electric
locomotives were used for livestock trains instead of the earlier ED class locomotives,
which were hard on the track with their long rigid wheelbase.
Infrastructure
The line is single track through very steep terrain rising 150 m above sea level in its
10 km length, with the highest point (152 m) at the north end of Kaka Tunnel.
The ruling grade is 1 in 36. There are seven narrow tunnels, six bridges, three passing
loops and three level crossings with half-barriers, (at the Fraser Avenue crossing
barriers were installed in 2009). There is a private rail crossing to a house immediately
south of the Fraser Avenue crossing, and a pedestrian crossing to Poona Street,
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Khandallah south of the Rangoon Street overbridge. In 2001, an estimated
1,043 passengers use the line on a working day.[2]
The Wellington City Council let a $1.7m tender to replace the Rangoon Street single-
lane overbridge of c1906, which crosses the Johnsonville line, with a two-lane
bridge.[3][4] Work commenced in June 2008 and was completed by December 2008.[5]
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