
The TranzAlpine is a
passenger
A passenger is a person who travels in a vehicle, but does not bear any responsibility for the tasks required for that vehicle to arrive at its destination or otherwise operate the vehicle, and is not a steward. The vehicles may be bicycles, ...
train
A train (from Old French , from Latin">-4; we might wonder whether there's a point at which it's appropriate to talk of the beginnings of French, that is, when it wa ... , from Latin , "to pull, to draw") is a series of connected vehicles th ...
operated by the
Great Journeys New Zealand division of
KiwiRail in the
South Island
The South Island ( , 'the waters of Pounamu, Greenstone') is the largest of the three major islands of New Zealand by surface area, the others being the smaller but more populous North Island and Stewart Island. It is bordered to the north by ...
of New Zealand over the
Midland Line; often regarded to be one of the world's great train journeys for the scenery through which it passes (see
famous trains). The journey is one-way, taking almost five hours. There are 16 tunnels and four viaducts, with the Staircase Viaduct elevated as much as .
The train has become increasingly popular, and carried 204,000 passengers in the financial year ending 2007.
By 2016, passenger numbers were approximately 130,000 a year, but rising again after the setback of the
Christchurch earthquake, and were exceeding pre-earthquake levels.
The TranzAlpine service was suspended in 2020 and again in 2021 because of the
COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic (also known as the coronavirus pandemic and COVID pandemic), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), began with an disease outbreak, outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China, in December ...
, but resumed on 14 January 2022.
History
The train was introduced on Sunday 22 November 1987 to replace the conventional Christchurch-Greymouth express trains and became one of the
New Zealand Railways Corporation's new tourist-oriented passenger services utilising refurbished rolling stock. Accompanying this new-look train were a new-look livery and rebranding.
Previous services
From late 1982 until 1983, twelve second class
NZR 56-foot carriages, three with luggage compartments at one end, were refurbished with new "Supervent" windows, fluorescent strip lights, wall-to-wall carpet, and later still, new seats designed by
Addington Workshops were introduced to replace the former articulated diesel-hauled
AC class "Grassgrub" carriages. A matching 56-foot van and six 50-foot wooden bogie box wagons for parcels completed the consist. Some of these wagons had served in the same capacity and in the green colour scheme with the Grassgrubs on the Picton and Greymouth routes and one wagon had served the old yellow ''
Northerner'' as a parcels van, prior to the introduction of the twelve 56-foot carriages. These carriages and wagons, like their Grassgrub predecessors, worked the
Picton Express (out and back) and Greymouth or West Coast Expresses (one each way simultaneously). All were painted in a bright red colour scheme.
1987–2012

With the deterioration of the yellow Northerner stock, carriages to replace these had to be found by sourcing from the rest of the
NZR 56-foot carriage fleet. The change in service was marked, with a refurbished modular
FM van turned power-luggage van with handbrake end-mounted 11 kW petrol generator, and three carriages, one from the ''
Endeavour''
Express
Express, The Expresss or EXPRESS may refer to:
Arts, entertainment and media Film
* ''Express: Aisle to Glory'', a 1998 comedy short film featuring Kal Penn
* ''The Express: The Ernie Davis Story'', a 2008 film starring Dennis Quaid
* The Expre ...
and later ''
Southerner''
Express
Express, The Expresss or EXPRESS may refer to:
Arts, entertainment and media Film
* ''Express: Aisle to Glory'', a 1998 comedy short film featuring Kal Penn
* ''The Express: The Ernie Davis Story'', a 2008 film starring Dennis Quaid
* The Expre ...
converted into a servery car seating 31 in reupholstered
Addington Workshops-produced seats, in bays of four with two pairs of seats each facing into a table, arranged alcove-style, with windows over double the size of the old ones, enabling better views of the alpine scenery, reupholstered seats and carpet, and a buffet counter service, to replace refreshment stops at railway station cafeterias at
Springfield and
Otira. The original intention had been to replace each pair of windows with one larger window, but the final solution was to cut out the side of the carriages and to insert a steel ladder frame to which sheets of strengthened glass were glued. The effect, of a continuous sheet of glass the length of the carriage, was spectacular and undoubtedly was a major factor in the success of the new service. The other two carriages were red Picton – Greymouth carriages that were refitted and repainted to the same standard but retained their smaller windows and seated 50, same seating arrangement and type as the servery car.
Reducing the service to an "out and back" format as opposed to "one each way" freed up carriages for other services, and by refurbishing existing stock it was hoped that the move would draw people to the previously poorly-performing Greymouth passenger trains. The service proved to be popular, with patronage doubling in the first year, with 7,183 passengers in January 1988 alone.
Soon, two more Picton – Greymouth carriages were refitted similar to the servery and observation car, so the two small-window carriages could be slotted into the ''Southerner'' consists. These new "big window" carriages each sat 51, same seating arrangement and type as the servery car. In the early 1990s, the first generation ''TranzAlpine'' panorama carriages had a new pressure ventilation system installed, similar to the ''
Bay Express'' and the observation carriage introduced to this train in 1991.
In 1988, the train won a
Tourism New Zealand Award and was voted as one of the top 10 "short" train journeys in the world. This was the result of the work of a freelance consulting designer and writer Paul Teague, who also worked at the Christchurch Press. His consulting was initiated by John Bennett, Canterbury and Westland Branch manager at the time. John Bennett was soon after promoted to Intercity National Manager, perhaps as a result of the work.
Initially, the locomotives that were used on the service were
DJ class locomotives, and, following the withdrawal of the DJ class in the early 1990s, two
DC class locomotives.
DF class locomotives were only sporadically used in 1992.
As the train became longer, one or two
DX class locomotives were used from December 1992,
or sometimes a DC and DX class locomotive each.
2012–present
On 26 November 2012, the new
AK class carriages that were built at
Hillside Workshops, were introduced on the service replacing the "big-window"
AO carriages. Since mid-2013, fire-suppressed
DXC locomotives have been assigned to the service.
Increasing popularity
The ''TranzAlpines popularity increased, and on days the ''Southerner'' was not operating it was common to see these carriages bolstering the three hard-pressed ''TranzAlpine'' carriages. In 1991, a ''Southerner'' power-luggage van had the end module away from the handbrake end converted into an open viewing area for passengers to enhance the already spectacular scenery on the route.
Realising this increased public attention, and with the success of air-conditioned panorama carriage trains on the North Island Main Trunk, between August 1994 and April 1995, eight carriages (one a former Southerner then InterCity spare buffet car, one a former ''Endeavour'' later ''Southerner'' servery car, two from the ''Northerner'', two from the ''Southerner'' and two from Auckland suburban services) were extensively overhauled and refitted with panorama windows like the earlier ''TranzAlpine'', ''
TranzCoastal'' (later Coastal Pacific), pressure-ventilated ''Bay'' Express and air-conditioned ''Northerner''/''
Overlander''
Express
Express, The Expresss or EXPRESS may refer to:
Arts, entertainment and media Film
* ''Express: Aisle to Glory'', a 1998 comedy short film featuring Kal Penn
* ''The Express: The Ernie Davis Story'', a 2008 film starring Dennis Quaid
* The Expre ...
trains and seating 50 (day carriages) and 26 (servery carriages), alcove-style, in new seats like those installed in refitted ''
Wairarapa Connection
The Wairarapa Line is a New Zealand interurban commuter rail service along the Wairarapa Line between Masterton, the largest town in the Wairarapa, and Wellington. It is operated by Wellington suburban operator Transdev Wellington, Transdev (w ...
'' and North Island Main Trunk carriages. An FM class modular van was refitted with a 90kW generator in the central module as opposed to the handbrake end modules on NIMT vans, to facilitate converting one end module into a public open viewing area.
In 1995, the
viewing van had its second end module converted for public access to match the first end. This was to facilitate its being marshalled into the centre of the new train, which was now re-organised into two four-car trainsets in one, separated by the power/baggage van. To compensate for luggage on the reformed train, the original ''TranzAlpine'' van was stripped of its generator and made to carry luggage only.
In 1998, a
second van, which was also one of three so fitted as 11 kW power/baggage vans for the original ''TranzAlpine'' and ''
Coastal Pacific'', was equipped with 90kW generator housed in the central module, for this train.
Even after the eight air-conditioned carriages were introduced in 1994–1995, the train still borrowed panorama carriages from the ''Southerner'' because of the train's increasing popularity.
Livery
As part of the rebranding of the
New Zealand Railways Corporation during the 1980s, a new dark blue livery was applied to the ''TranzAlpine'', with a horizontal full-length 220 mm thick white stripe sandwiching a 100 mm thick red band. The name InterCity was imposed into the stripe as well. This dark blue livery would become standard and remain contemporary until 18 October 1995. In 1990, when New Zealand Rail Limited took over rail operations from the corporation, the InterCity livery was modified to facilitate the new blue and yellow primary colours, and the red band on carriage sides was replaced by a 100 mm yellow one. In 1993–1994 the yellow band was replaced by a green 100 mm band, the white stripe and dark blue livery retained. In 1995, a new full-length 350 mm light blue stripe, incorporating the Tranz Scenic logo was introduced on carriages that were not painted all over in the new blue colour scheme. However, during the 1995 rebranding, the ''TranzAlpine'' carriages were the first long-distance passenger carriages to receive the new paint scheme and did not wear the transitional light blue stripe.
Connoisseur service
In early 1991, a former ''Endeavour'' car was completely rebuilt as a panorama and rear-view car to replace the (first) ''
Connoisseur'' carriage, that car refurbished in the standard "big window" InterCity seats and tables carriage format. In a continuous attempt to attract the travelling public back to rail, InterCity expanded on what had begun in 1987, when a ''
Southerner'' car had been leased to a private tourist firm. The original carriage offered enhanced services, including complimentary meals, refreshments and newspapers. However, this second carriage, also named a ''Connoisseurs car, and which also offered improved services over those afforded to other ''TranzAlpine'' passengers, was transferred to the North Island Main Trunk passenger services by the end of 1991.
Route
The train runs daily between and . After leaving Christchurch, the train travels through the fertile
Canterbury Plains past the
Waimakariri River along the
Main South Line, to
Rolleston. It then turns onto the
Midland Line, which passes through the
Southern Alps past the spectacular
Waimakariri River gorge, via
Arthur's Pass and the
Otira Tunnel and over the
Alpine Fault, terminating in Greymouth, on the
West Coast. There are proposals to extend the service from Greymouth to
Hokitika.
File:KiwiRail DXC class 5270 Cass.jpg, DXC5270 travelling between Cass and Craigieburn
File:TranzAlpine departing Springfield.jpg, DFB7241 and DXC5270 departing Springfield with the ''TranzAlpine''.
File:SouthernAlps-NewZealand-ViewFromTranzAlpine.jpg, A view of the Southern Alps from the ''TranzAlpine''.
File:TranzAlpine bridge by Waimakariri River.JPG, Highest bridge of the ''TranzAlpine'' service.
File:KiwiRail TranzAlpine.jpg, The ''TranzAlpine'' Near Lake Sarah.
References
Further reading
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*
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External links
TranzAlpine train information on The Great Journeys of New Zealand website
{{Public transport in New Zealand
Long-distance passenger trains in New Zealand
Rail transport in the Canterbury Region
Named passenger trains of New Zealand
Rail transport in the West Coast Region
Railway services introduced in 1987
1987 establishments in New Zealand
Tourist attractions in Christchurch