Kapuni Branch
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The Kapuni Branch, formerly known as the Opunake Branch, is a
branch railway A branch line is a secondary railway line which branches off a more important through route, usually a Main line (railway), main line. A very short branch line may be called a spur line. Branch lines may serve one or more industries, or a city ...
in
North Island The North Island ( , 'the fish of MÄui', historically New Ulster) is one of the two main islands of New Zealand, islands of New Zealand, separated from the larger but less populous South Island by Cook Strait. With an area of , it is the List ...
, New Zealand. It opened in 1926, and ran 36.4 km across the southern slopes of
Mount Taranaki Mount Taranaki (), officially Taranaki Maunga and also known as Mount Egmont, is a dormant stratovolcano in the Taranaki region on the west coast of New Zealand's North Island. At , it is the second highest mountain in the North Island, afte ...
to link the rural town of
ÅŒpunake ÅŒpunake () is a small urban area in the North Island of New Zealand, located within the Taranaki region and governed by the South Taranaki District Council. Positioned along State Highway 45, it lies between HÄwera to the south and New Plymo ...
with the Marton–New Plymouth Line 2 km north of the small rural settlement of Te Roti, equidistant between
Eltham Eltham ( ) is a district of South London, southeast London, England, within the Royal Borough of Greenwich. It is east-southeast of Charing Cross, and is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London. The three ...
and
HÄwera HÄwera is the second-largest centre in the Taranaki region of New Zealand's North Island, with a population of . It is near the coast of the South Taranaki Bight. The origins of the town lie in a government military base that was establishe ...
. With the decline of rural freight, part of the line was closed in 1976, but the 10.9 km section to
Kapuni Kapuni is an onshore natural gas-condensate field located in the Taranaki Basin, a ~100,000 km2 partially-inverted rift basin on the Taranaki Peninsula in the North Island, New Zealand. Discovered in 1959 and brought into production in 1970 ...
was retained and upgraded to service traffic to the Kapuni natural gas field.


Early Surveys

When the plains of South Taranaki were being laid out, provision had been made for a railway line between Eltham and Ōpunake and a railway reserve set aside in an almost straight line between these centres. However, initial route surveys conducted in 1908 concluded that this reserve was “a little too far to the north to serve the country generally in the most efficient manner†and new surveys were conducted to find a more suitable route across the plains. The four routes surveyed were: * Ōpunake to Stratford * Ōpunake to
HÄwera HÄwera is the second-largest centre in the Taranaki region of New Zealand's North Island, with a population of . It is near the coast of the South Taranaki Bight. The origins of the town lie in a government military base that was establishe ...
* ÅŒpunake to
Eltham Eltham ( ) is a district of South London, southeast London, England, within the Royal Borough of Greenwich. It is east-southeast of Charing Cross, and is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London. The three ...
* ÅŒpunake to Te Roti The route from Te Roti was ultimately chosen as being the most direct and least expensive option. It also took a more central route over the plains, creating a shorter journey for coastal farms to access the railway.


Construction

The branch line came about as a result of an election promise at the
1911 New Zealand general election The 1911 New Zealand general election was held on Thursday, 7 and 14 December in the general electorates, and on Tuesday, 19 December in the MÄori electorates to elect a total of 80 MPs to the 18th session of the New Zealand Parliament. A tota ...
. A branch line of "about 23 miles" to ÅŒpunake was authorised in 1912 for £400,000 by the Railways Authorization Act 1912, with work commencing in 1914. Earthworks reached Kapuni by 1916, but progress was slowed by World War I. Work was suspended in December 1917, and recommenced in March 1919. At the peak 200 men were employed on line works, including a large 1.6 km cutting near Waiteika. The Waingongoro Bridge near Te Roti, an unusual (for New Zealand) brick arch bridge, was completed in 1921, and the second bridge in 1923. The Public Works Department began running goods trains to Kapuni from 1 August 1923, and to Mangawhero Road by December 1924. The ÅŒpunake terminal was reached on 8 June 1925. On 12 July 1926 the Railways Department took over the line. A construction train was derailed by a cow in March 1925 and the guard was killed and 3 other workers injured. The railway was officially opened by the Prime Minister, Robert Coates, on 27 October 1925.


Manaia Siding

A 9 km spur from Kapuni to Manaia was built in 1920–24, but track was only laid as far as a ballast pit on the Kaupokonui River, and the section as far as the ballast pit was closed and the track lifted by 1926.


Operations

When the branch was opened to ÅŒpunake in 1926 services consisted of one return service three days a week, running on Monday, Wednesday & Friday. Services were run as mixed services, with passenger accommodation included attached to the end of the freight train. Services departed HÄwera at 9:30am, reaching ÅŒpunake 90 minutes later. Return services departed at 11:45am reaching HÄwera at 1:42pm. There was no stationmaster assigned to ÅŒpunake station initially, despite the large station building provided. From 13 March 1931 there was a caretaker and from 22 June 1942 a stationmaster.'''' By 1930 goods traffic had increased and an extra service was scheduled for Thursdays as well. As well as general freight and livestock, a number of smaller dairy factories along the line provided good traffic at this time. Road competition for freight from these dairy companies ramped up from the 1940s with several dairy companies preferring to truck produce directly to New Plymouth.


Passenger Services

Regular passenger numbers were never high - the first official train service started with only 3 people. As early as 1930 there were recommendations to remove passenger accommodation to save costs. Passenger services endured on the branch until 16 October 1955 when services became freight-only. Excursion trains were popular in the late 1920s and early 1930s with trains from Whanganui, New Plymouth and Waitara visiting. The first such train was a race train that ran to Pihama station on 18 March 1925 - over a year before the branch was officially completed. An excursion from New Plymouth in 1967 took about 2½ hours each way.


Motive Power

The first official train to Opunake was hauled by a Ww class
tank engine A tank locomotive is a steam locomotive which carries its water in one or more on-board water tanks, instead of a more traditional tender. Most tank engines also have bunkers (or fuel tanks) to hold fuel; in a tender-tank locomotive a tender h ...
. Later AB class tender engines became the usual motive power until the end of
steam power A steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid. The steam engine uses the force produced by steam pressure to push a piston back and forth inside a cylinder. This pushing force can be transf ...
in Taranaki in late 1966. From December 1966, DB class
diesel locomotive A diesel locomotive is a type of railway locomotive in which the prime mover (locomotive), power source is a diesel engine. Several types of diesel locomotives have been developed, differing mainly in the means by which mechanical power is con ...
s became the primary motive power used (introduced a few weeks after the nearby Waitara Branch railway). By the 1980s they had in turn been replaced with DC class diesel locomotives running as far as Kapuni, the new end of the line.


Stations

The following stations were located on the Opunake Branch. All stations closed to passenger traffic on 31 Oct 1955. The railway station building in Opunake was a Class A lean-to building, complete with general and ladies waiting rooms and space for a station office. It and a x goods shed and a lamp and footwarmer shed were built by J W Boon, of Stratford, by July 1925. He also built 3 railway houses in 1925/26. By 1926 there were also a platform, cart approach, loading bank, stockyards, an engine shed, 55 foot
turntable A phonograph, later called a gramophone, and since the 1940s a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogue reproduction of sound. The sound vibration waveforms are recorded as corresponding phys ...
(built at Addington Workshops about February 1926'''' and still in use in 1966) and sidings able to hold 60, 30, 26, 23 and 18 wagons, reduced to 55, 31 and 17 by 1959.''''


Te Roti Junction

The junction with the Marton - New Plymouth railway line faced south towards HÄwera with trains operating from that station. The station of Te Roti was rebuilt as an island station and the branch ran parallel to the mainline for around half a mile north of the station, before swinging hard left to cross the Waingongoro river bridge. On 14 May 1961 the junction was realigned with points facing toward Eltham and services operated from Stratford instead. The HÄwera locomotive depot was closed around the same time, and Te Roti station itself closed in 1967.


Closure beyond Kapuni

From the 1970s traffic to ÅŒpunake was becoming negligible due to competition from road transport. However, the section as far as Kapuni was much better patronized, chiefly due to the New Zealand
Lactose Lactose is a disaccharide composed of galactose and glucose and has the molecular formula C12H22O11. Lactose makes up around 2–8% of milk (by mass). The name comes from (Genitive case, gen. ), the Latin word for milk, plus the suffix ''-o ...
factory at Kapuni and the
natural gas Natural gas (also fossil gas, methane gas, and gas) is a naturally occurring compound of gaseous hydrocarbons, primarily methane (95%), small amounts of higher alkanes, and traces of carbon dioxide and nitrogen, hydrogen sulfide and helium ...
and
urea Urea, also called carbamide (because it is a diamide of carbonic acid), is an organic compound with chemical formula . This amide has two Amine, amino groups (–) joined by a carbonyl functional group (–C(=O)–). It is thus the simplest am ...
plant at Palmer Road. For this reason, in April 1976 it was decided to close the line beyond Kapuni (effective 31 July 1976). At the same time the rest of the branch was upgraded and renamed the Kapuni Branch. The lifting of the railway beyond Kapuni was initially subject to a union ban, and track and buildings remained in place until the early 1980s (similar to what happened with the closure of the
Waiau Branch The Waiau Branch was a branch line railway in the northern Canterbury, New Zealand, Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island. Known as the Great Northern Railway for its first few decades of life, the Waiau Branch was seen as part of ...
in Canterbury around the same time).


Remnants beyond Kapuni

Today the former section from Kapuni to ÅŒpunake has "plenty of railway remnants to satisfy the enthusiast." Much of the former roadbed is still traceable with embankments and cuttings often repurposed as farm tracks. For many years there remained a goods shed and loading bay at Pihama and a locomotive shed, gateposts, a platform and goods loading bank at ÅŒpunake. Most of these have since been removed, but concrete gateposts remain at several road crossings to this day and the former ÅŒpunake station site remains clearly visible. The former ÅŒpunake station building has since been relocated to the Taranaki Pioneer Village in Stratford.


See also

*'' Marton-New Plymouth Line'' *''
Mount Egmont Branch The Mount Egmont Branch was a short but steep branch railway line in Taranaki, New Zealand, built to supply rail ballast for the Taranaki and Whanganui districts from a quarry on Mount Taranaki (known as Egmont during the line's lifetime). Alth ...
'' *'' Stratford–Okahukura Line'' *'' Waitara Branch''


References


Citations


Bibliography

* * * Hermann, Bruce J; ''North Island Branch Lines'' pp 49,50 (2007, New Zealand Railway & Locomotive Society, Wellington) *


External links


Article on opening of Opunake Branch, 1926
Photos -
bridge over Mangatoki Stream and a train at the ballast pit in 1923

bridge construction in December 1924

bridges over Kaupokonui Stream (just beyond Kapuni) and Waiaua River (near ÅŒpunake) in 1925

aerial view of the station in 1947

Ab 707 at Opunake with a passenger train to Auckland in 1966

preserved station at Taranaki Pioneer Village
{{NZR Lines Railway lines in New Zealand Rail transport in Taranaki Railway lines opened in 1923 Railway lines closed in 1976 3 ft 6 in gauge railways in New Zealand Closed railway lines in New Zealand 1923 establishments in New Zealand 1976 disestablishments in New Zealand