Tamaki railway station was a station serving Tāmaki, on Auckland's Eastern Line in New Zealand, from 1930 to 2003. A station at Tāmaki was first mentioned in March 1920, when the site was described as, "in the middle of open grass with hardly a house within half a mile". It was to be called Marama, until on 27 May 1929 it was decided to call it Tamaki and, to avoid confusion, rename Tamaki Siding, near Dannevirke, as Tapuata.
Localisation
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From November 1928 J W Bambury Ltd, of Auckland, built a wooden station with a tiled roof. By 6 May 1930 it was ready for goods traffic, with an island platform, loading bank and a 31 wagon siding. It opened to passengers on Sunday 16 November 1930. In 1926 it was 6 mi 46 ch (10.6 km) from the Britomart terminus and in 1943 5 mi 71 ch (9.5 km) from the 1930 Auckland terminal. Footbridge No 12 was at the Westfield end of the platform, which in 1978 was 166 m (545 ft) long and 0.4 m (1 ft 4 in) high. From Monday 30 November 1959 it became an officered station, until it closed to small lots and parcels on 31 March 1983. In 1989 it was described as a low island platform with closed up station building. Railway housing was provided after Cabinet approved 25 pre-cut houses on 3 November 1953. In 1955 46 State houses were completed.
A new goods yard opened in December 1959, with a 50 ft (15 m) x 40 ft (12 m) goods shed (50 feet by 40 feet ) and 80 ft (24 m) long loading shelter from February 1960. In 1961 a separate goods office and a store for tarpaulins, dunnage and fuel were added. On 1 August 1962 a 75 ft (23 m) extension to the goods shed was completed, with approval for another £17,500 extension of the shed on 23 November 1964, which could then take 26 wagons and the loading shelter 36 wagons. On 30 June 1965 another £63,000 of extensions and alterations to the station yard to provide for additional goods handling was authorised and on 1 February 1966 £1,200 for a 70 ft (21 m) low-level loading bank.
See also
List of Auckland railway stations