The Main Line is a railway line in South East Queensland, Australia. It was opened in a series of sections between 1865 and 1867. It commences at Roma St Station in Brisbane and extends west 161 km to Toowoomba. It is the first narrow gauge main line constructed in the world. The section of the line from the end of Murphys Creek railway station to the Ruthven Street overbridge, Harlaxton is listed on the Queensland Heritage Register.[1] The Murphys Creek Railway Complex,[2] the Lockyer Creek Railway Bridge (Lockyer),[3] the Lockyer Creek Railway Bridge (Murphys Creek)[4] and Swansons Rail Bridge[5] are also heritage listed.
The 31 km (19 mi) section from Ipswich (a city about 38 km or 24 mi from Brisbane) to Grandchester (originally Bigge's Camp) was the first section of railway line opened in Queensland, on 31 July 1865.
Queensland Railways (QR) was the first operator in the world to adopt narrow gauge (in this case 3 ft 6 in or 1,067 mm) for a main line,[6] and this remains the system wide gauge within Queensland today.
The colony of Queensland separated from New South Wales in 1859, and the new government was keen to facilitate development and immigration. Improved transport to the fertile Darling Downs region situated west of Toowoomba was seen as a priority. As adequate river transport was already established between the capital Brisbane and the then separate settlement of Ipswich, the railway commenced from the latter locality and the initial section, built over relatively flat, easy country opened to Bigge's Camp, at the eastern base of the Little Liverpool Range, on 31 July 1865. Called the Main Line, the only significant engineering work was the bridge over the Bremer River to North Ipswich.
Built by the Queensland government to the unusual (for the time) gauge of 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm), the line largely followed the alignment surveyed by a private company, the Moreton Bay Tramway Company, which had proposed to build a 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge horse-drawn tramway but had been unable to raise funds to do so beyond an initial start on earthworks.
The adoption of narrow gauge was controversial at the time, and was largely predicated by the government's desire for the fastest possible construction timeframe at least cost. This resulted in adoption of sharper curves and a lower axle load than was considered possible using standard gauge, and an assessment at the time put the cost of a narrow gauge line from Ipswich to Toowoomba as 25% of the cost of a standard gauge line. In a colony with a population of ~30,000 when the decision was made, it is understandable.
Beyond Grandchester, the line was built with curves of 5 chains (100 m) radius and uncompensated grades of 1 in 50 (2%), giving an effective grade of 1 in 41 (~2.5%) on 100 m (5.0 chains) radius curves. Two tunnels were required on the section to Laidley, known as 'Six Chain' (either because it is situated on a 6 chains or 120 m radius curve, or because it is 6 chains or 120.7 m to be exact) long, or both) and 'Victoria' after the English Queen of the day. The latter is 540 m (1,770 ft) long, and both remain in service, being the oldest single track railway tunnels still in use in Australia.
From the western portal of the Victoria tunnel the line descends at 1 in 50 to Laidley and then over relatively flat (1 in 100 maximum grades) easy country to Gatton (opened 1 June 1866) and Helidon (opened 30 July 1866). This 38 km (24 mi) section was duplicated in 1913–14, with the section from Laidley to Yarongmulu (just west of the Victoria Tunnel) being built to 1 in 60 for Brisbane bound trains.
From Helidon the line climbs 369 metres (1,211 ft) in 26 km (16 mi) up the Main Range to the summit at Harlaxton [612 metres or 2,008 feet above sea level (asl)] at an average grade of 1 in 70. However, as the maximum grade is 1 in 50 uncompensated with 100 m (5.0 chains) radius curves, the ruling equivalent grade is 1 in 41, and the maximum speed on the entire section is 30 km/h (19 mph). This section was opened on 30 April 1867. As built the section contained 157 cuttings (up to 520 m or 1,710 ft long and 16 m or 52 ft deep), 128 embankments (up to 360 m or 1,180 ft long and 13 m or 43 ft high), 47 bridges (total length 1,580 m or 5,180 ft, up to 369 m or 1,211 ft long and 22 m or 72 ft high), 175 culverts, 9 tunnels (total length 886 m or 2,907 ft), 49 curves of 100 m (5.0 chains) radius and a further 77 curves between 110 m (5.5 chains) and 400 m (20 chains) radius, with a total length of 17.7 km (11.0 mi), or 68% of the section.
Comment on the design
A 1995 report[7] commissioned by QR to investigate improving the clearance (loading gauge) through the tunnels so 2.9 m (9 ft 6 in) high ISO containers could be accommodated includes a section commenting on the original design. It states that:
the route adopted is a steep (1 in 50 grades) sinuous (5 chain or 100 m radius curves) one more suitable for horse drawn vehicles and the maximum permitted speed on such curves is, even today, only 30 km per hour. The combined effect of the grades and curves is equivalent to a grade on straight track of 1 in 42 and this severely restricts train loads.
This effect of curvature on resistance to locomotion appears not to have been considered by the 'designers' as no reference to it has been found in our research of the papers of the day.
In defence of the adopted route ... while the excavation of cuttings along the side of hills was comparatively easily achieved, the transportation of excavated material over any distance was (during construction in the 1860s) relatively expensive and slow, hence the construction of long embankments was not perceived as practicable.
For example, the 'Six Chain' tunnel could have been eliminated by constructing a 400 m long embankment up to 10 m high. Similarly, long cuttings were not viable and tunnels were excavated at much lessor [sic?] depths of cut than would be adopted today.
Speed of construction (27 km between Grandchester and Gatton completed in 19 months) as well as cost were very important considerations to the Queensland Colony and in this instance future considerations were suppressed.
It goes on to comment on the Main Range section that:
the design of the route is further flawed in that it appears little effort was put into balancing cuts and fills so as to minimise the amount of earthworks/bridging.
While such balancing is not essential nor even cost effective (bearing in mind the problems in 1866 of transporting earth over longer distances) a review of Section 5 by William Mason (Acting Engineer-in-Chief of NSW Railways) in 1868 shows only one third of excavated material was used in embankments. He further reported that this surplus material could, in many instances, have been used as fill to eliminate some of the 47 bridges constructed.
This contention is demonstrated by the fact that by 1900 at least 17 bridges had been filled in, and today less than 12 of the original 47 bridges exist.
Of the bridges eliminated, 12 were of iron girder construction, and some of these were lattice types up to 30 m long which were designed and manufactured in England. The designers were apparently unaware that many of these girders were to carry curved track with the consequence they were seriously overloaded and had to be strengthened on site.
Only 1 bridge, 'Swansons' at 154.7 km (over Lockyer Creek) was replaced (in 1900) by another bridge, being a concrete surfaced masonry structure of 3 x ~10 m arches up to 15 m high.
When bridges were eliminated the opportunity was generally taken to ease or eliminate curves by way of deviations so that during the 1867-1902 period some 19 deviations were made to the original route. These deviations were so substantial that in 1903 the entire route was resurveyed and new Working Plan and Sections were prepared.
Over the years since 1902 further deviations have been made eliminating a further 18 bridges and in overcoming major slips at Ballard (in 1950) and at 144 km (in 1994).
In addition, between 1992-95 an access road was constructed on the Up side (ie. left hand side of a train traveling to Toowoomba) of the track which has largely removed the shallow cuttings and widened the low embankments so that today the appearance of the route is greatly changed from the original construction, to be more open and visible.
Comparatively speaking this section of railway may be likened to a goat track made to contour nearly every little spur and valley in the side of the range. Its main redeeming feature is that it was built quickly (27 months) but this has cost Queensland greatly in operating and maintenance costs over the last 128 years (at time of report, ie. 1995).
In 2013 QR called tenders for the lowering of the 11 tunnel floors to enable 9 ft 6 in (2.9 m) ISO containers to be carried when the work is completed. The work was completed in 2020 during the COVID-19 shutdown.[8] It also enabled QPB Baggage and Power Cars to be used on the Westlander between Brisbane and Charleville.
The early realisation by the Queensland government of the advantages of rail transport over river transport resulted in the line being extended east and opened from Ipswich to Sherwood on 5 October 1874, Oxley Point (now Chelmer) on 4 February 1875 and on to Roma Street Station [situated beside the street named after the wife of the first Queensland Governor, Lady Diamantina Bowen (née di Roma), who also had the town of Roma, 511 km west of Roma St (which is the 0 km post on the QR system) on the western line named after her] on 7 July 1876 with the completion of the Albert Bridge over the Brisbane River between Oxley Point and Indooroopilly. As part of that project the line west of Ipswich was realigned with a new bridge over the Bremer River at Wulkuraka opening on 26 April 1875. Part of the original line remains to access the North Ipswich Railway Workshops Museum.
Originally built as single track, the Roma St - Ipswich section was duplicated from 1885 to 1887, indicating how quickly the traffic volume grew on the line. The Albert Bridge was built to accommodate two tracks in 1876, though only one was laid at the time.
The line west of Ipswich was duplicated to Wulkuraka in 1902, to Grandchester in 1913 and from Yarongmalu (western end of the Victoria Tunnel) to Helidon in 1918.
The section from Roma St to Corinda (11 km) was quadruplicated in 1963,[9] and extended to Darra (a further 5 km) in 2011, which became the junction for the first section of the new Springfield line at that time.
The Main Line is currently laid with 47 and 50 kg/m (94.7 and 100.8 lb/yd) rail between Roma St and Ipswich, 41 kg/m (82.7 lb/yd) rail west of there. The two tracks added in 1963 between Roma St and Corinda have an axle load of 20 tonnes (19.7 long tons; 22.0 short tons), the rest of the line has a 15.75-tonne (15.50-long-ton; 17.36-short-ton) axle load.
The speed limit is 100 km/h (62 mph) to Rosewood, 80 km/h (50 mph) west of there except for block freight and coal trains which are limited to 60 km/h (37 mph), and 30 km/h (19 mph) when traveling downhill from Harlaxton to Murphys Creek.
The section between Ipswich and Rosewood features bi-directional signalling.
The Main Line between Roma St and Darra was the first section of railway electrified in Queensland, commencing service in 1979. Electrification has subsequently been extended to Rosewood, the limit of Brisbane urban rail services.
A series of branch lines were built to connect to the Main Line, and these are listed from east to west below.