16-549: Jordanville may refer to: Jordanville railway station , Melbourne, Australia Jordanville, New York , a community in Herkimer County Jordanville, Nova Scotia , Canada Jordanville, former community in North Carolina centered on conjure doctor Jim Jordan A metonym for Holy Trinity Monastery near Jordanville, New York [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
32-441: A pedestrian subway to Winsor Avenue and Huntingdale Road. It opened on 5 May 1930, with the current station provided in 1964. The station was provisionally named as Kabbareng . However, during construction, it was renamed to Jordanville. Additionally, it is served by bus route 767. The station is approximately 17 kilometres (11 mi) or around a 28-minute train ride away from Flinders Street . Jordanville railway station
48-608: Is a bicycle shed with storage for 26 bikes. Although there are ramps , they do not fully comply with the Disability Discrimination Act of 1992 as the gradient of the ramps is steeper than the maximum of 1:14 allowed under the Act. The station is currently served by the Glen Waverley line, which is operated by Metro Trains Melbourne. Services to Glen Waverley travel east. Services to the city head towards Burnley , joining
64-400: Is connected to Winsor Avenue and Huntingdale Road via a pedestrian subway. The length of the platform is approximately 160 metres (520 ft), long enough for a Metro Trains 7-car HCMT . There is a single station building, which primarily functions as a waiting room. The main car park at the station is located on Winsor Avenue just south of the station. In addition to the car park, there
80-583: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Jordanville railway station Jordanville railway station is a commuter railway station on the Glen Waverley line , which is part of the Melbourne railway network . It serves the south-eastern suburb of Mount Waverley , in Melbourne , Victoria, Australia. Jordanville station is a ground level unstaffed station, featuring an island platform , connected by
96-415: Is located in the suburb of Mount Waverley. On the south side of the station is Winsor Avenue and Huntingdale Road is to the west. The station is owned by VicTrack , a state government agency, and is operated by Metro Trains Melbourne . The station is approximately 17 kilometres (11 mi) or around a 28-minute train ride away from Flinders Street. Jordanville station consists of an island platform which
112-631: The Ashworth Improvement Plan , a flyover was constructed to the east of the station, to allow Glen Waverley line services to cross over the Hawthorn -bound line. In 1963, the Madden Grove level crossing , located nearby in the down direction on the Glen Waverley line, was provided, replacing an earlier level crossing. In 1966, the signal box was rebuilt, the Burnley Street level crossing
128-511: The Belgrave , Lilydale , and Alamein lines before heading to Richmond and traveling through the City Loop in a clockwise direction . Platform 1: Platform 2: Jordanville is served by bus route 767 which departs the station from the bus stop on Huntingdale Road. Jordanville station opened on 5 May 1930, when the railway line from East Malvern was extended to Glen Waverley. The station
144-490: The eastern ( down ) end of the station, adjacent to the Glen Waverley line, while an additional, rarely-used siding is located at the western (Up) end. Burnley station opened on 1 May 1880, like the suburb itself, was named after William Burnley , a local land purchaser and, between 1853–1856, was a member of the Victorian Legislative Council for the district of North Bourke . In August 1943, as part of
160-465: The inner-eastern Melbourne suburb of Burnley in Victoria, Australia. Burnley is a ground level premium station , featuring four platforms, two island platforms with two faces connected by an accessible underground concourse . It opened on 1 May 1880. Initially opened as Burnley Street , the station was given its current name of Burnley on 1 September 1882. Train stabling facilities are located at
176-459: The last meeting of the Mulgrave Council indignation was expressed at the name of Kabbareng being selected for the railway station at Box Hill-road on the new Darling-Glen Waverley line. The council's recommendation was Jordan. It was decided to ask the district Parliamentary representatives to take up the matter in support of the name selected by the council." In the 1950s, the level crossing
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#1732852032264192-429: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jordanville&oldid=1183358702 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
208-486: The signal box was abolished, with control transferred to Metrol . Burnley has two island platforms . The southern island platform (Platforms 1 and 2) includes a large building, which includes a customer service window, an enclosed waiting room and toilets. On weekdays, the majority of services to Lilydale and Belgrave don't stop at Burnley, as these operate express to other stations. Most services from Burnley usually only operate as far as Blackburn or Ringwood . It
224-438: Was grade-separated and the line towards Richmond expanded to quadruple track . In 1972, the third track to Hawthorn was commissioned. On 24 October 1997, the stabling facility was provided, as part of the closure and replacement of Jolimont Yard . As part of this facility, a crossover was provided at the up end of the level crossing. On 19 December 2008, Burnley was upgraded to a premium station . On 30 November 2017,
240-500: Was named after the Jordan family, mainly John Jordan, who was an early settler and shire councillor . The original name of the station, Kabbareng , is an Indigenous word meaning "upper". The name was controversial, as evidenced by a letter sent to the editor of The Argus , on 4 March 1930, using the pseudonym "Anti-Kabbareng". An article in The Age , on 21 March 1930, stated that: "At
256-486: Was removed at Jordanville by moving the railway above Huntingdale road. In 2014, Metro Trains Melbourne was forced to upgrade the track near Jordanville due to the poor maintenance of tracks. Burnley railway station Burnley railway station is a commuter railway station and the junction point for the Lilydale , Belgrave , Alamein and Glen Waverley lines, part of the Melbourne railway network . It serves
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