Coastal Pacific moves to winter timetable
KiwiRail Press Release
5 April 2012
From 11 May to 11 September, KiwiRail’s Coastal Pacific train service between Christchurch and Picton will operate a reduced winter timetable. The return service will run on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday only, which are typically the most popular days for travel.
“The Coastal Pacific service historically operates at a loss during the winter months, and since the Christchurch earthquake in February last year, Coastal Pacific passenger numbers have been on average 30 to 35 percent below what they usually are,” says KiwiRail’s General Manager of Passenger Services, Deborah Hume.
“The Overlander service between Wellington and Auckland already operates a reduced winter timetable to cater for the drop in passenger demand over the slower winter period (May to September), and KiwiRail will now be doing the same with the Coastal Pacific.
“The reduced passenger numbers on the Coastal Pacific has meant that it is commercially sensible to reduce services over the winter months, as we have done with the Overlander,” Ms Hume says.
While passenger numbers on the TranzAlpine service are still lower than they were prior to the Christchurch earthquake, passenger numbers are starting to build again for that service. The service is popular throughout both the summer and winter months, so will continue to run daily throughout the winter.
“As Christchurch recovers, hotel capacity is expanded, and more attractions become available, we fully expect to see more passengers travelling on TranzAlpine and the Coastal Pacific in the future,” says Ms Hume.
From September 11, the Coastal Pacific will return to daily operations.
ENDS
Accorhotels
Yesterday
Announcement: New Zealand’s largest hotel group, Accor, announced today plans to open two of its four Christchurch hotels, which were closed following the earthquake in February 2011.
Hotel Ibis Christchurch is the first hotel scheduled to re-open with a target date of September 2012. Novotel Christchurch will follow, with a planned re-opening date of April 2013.
Decisions on the future of Accor’s two All Seasons hotels in Christchurch are still pending as access – particularly to the Cashel Street property – has been severely restricted by on-going demolition work in the area.
“When we re-open the Ibis and Novotel hotels they will be effectively new hotels,” said regional manager, Zayne Boon. “Both of the hotels were relatively new – the Ibis was built in 2007 and the Novotel 2010 – so they were built to very exacting standards and their structures received only minor damage during the earthquakes. The main problems were internal and required a complete re-fit of both hotels, so when they re-open they will have a very fresh and new feel to them.
“The heritage Warners Hotel wing of the Novotel had to be demolished, but the new part of the hotel survived the impact of the earthquake very well, despite being located right in the heart of Cathedral Square.
“There is a critical shortage of accommodation in Christchurch and the re-opening of these hotels will allow significant progress to be made in reviving Christchurch’s commercial and tourist fortunes. It will also provide employment and will help support the wider revival of Christchurch’s central business district.
“There are already encouraging signs, with permanent and temporary shopping precincts opening and more businesses returning to the city centre, but the city really needs the confidence boost of major international hotels re-opening to cater for domestic and overseas visitors. It will really help accelerate the re-vitalisation process.
“We are fully committed to the re-vitalising of Christchurch and believe that developments over the next 12 months will send a very positive signal to the rest of the world that the city is ready to welcome tourists back.”
kaiwhara wrote:Yup, I was on the Tranz Alpine on Feb 22 2011, and got stranded over there. Reasonable load on that train - so much so myself and my partner took the last available hotel room in Greymouth - some passengers had to go as far as Punakaiki and Hokitika to find emergency accomodation - and that was on a slow day on the coast.
Much has changed since - of course...
geoff_184 wrote:Nice suggestion, but totally unrealistic in the New Zealand context.
geoff_184 wrote:You do realise most rail and road traffic heading north from Christchurch is going to Picton, not Nelson?
john-ston wrote:Geoff, no ****, there is no railway going to Nelson, so ergo, most rail traffic heading north from Christchurch is going to Picton.
roger lascelles wrote:I perceive it as a grave error of judgement not to have built it through to Nelson in the first place,
but maybe this was, in part, due to the less than satisfactory tunnelling techniques of the time.
roger lascelles wrote:It is notoriously difficult to have successful operations on a cul-de-sac line running to a secondary town
like Picton or Gisborne, but extension beyond, to a significant waypoint, assures success.
roger lascelles wrote:The situation CRIES OUT for the extension to Nelson. It is possible, reasonable and feasible.
Just think of modern, lightweight DMUs shuttling reciprocally between ChCh and Nelson!!
Think of the buses and trucks that would disappear from SH1. Think too of the reduction in deaths!
Think of WiFi and decent catering on a DMU service. Bliss!!
Roger Lascelles,London
roger lascelles wrote:The long term answer to the Coastal Pacific is not to cut it back, but to complete it
through from Picton for the 64 kms west to Nelson.
At the moment it is like having built a line from New York to Nevada but failing to reach California.
roger lascelles wrote:In Year One we bore the 4.5 km tunnel immediately west of Picton - and so on.
roger lascelles wrote:It is notoriously difficult to have successful operations on a cul-de-sac line running to a secondary town
like Picton
roger lascelles wrote:The situation CRIES OUT for the extension to Nelson. It is possible, reasonable and feasible.
roger lascelles wrote:Just think of modern, lightweight DMUs shuttling reciprocally between ChCh and Nelson!!
roger lascelles wrote:Think of the buses and trucks that would disappear from SH1
roger lascelles wrote:The long term answer to the Coastal Pacific is not to cut it back, but to complete it
through from Picton for the 64 kms west to Nelson.
At the moment it is like having built a line from New York to Nevada but failing to reach California.
The inevitable question will be asked "Where is the money coming from?"
The answer to this is to build it INCREMENTALLY in short-distance annual contracts easily funded.
In Year One we bore the 4.5 km tunnel immediately west of Picton - and so on.
I perceive it as a grave error of judgement not to have built it through to Nelson in the first place,
but maybe this was, in part, due to the less than satisfactory tunnelling techniques of the time.
But these problems have been resolved with the new cutting discs, and nowadays, at the huge Innotrans
Exhibition held in Berlin in September each even-numbered year, there has been a surge of interest
in tunnelling as TOCs realise that it is so easy now.
It is notoriously difficult to have successful operations on a cul-de-sac line running to a secondary town
like Picton or Gisborne, but extension beyond, to a significant waypoint, assures success.
The situation CRIES OUT for the extension to Nelson. It is possible, reasonable and feasible.
Just think of modern, lightweight DMUs shuttling reciprocally between ChCh and Nelson!!
Think of the buses and trucks that would disappear from SH1. Think too of the reduction in deaths!
Think of WiFi and decent catering on a DMU service. Bliss!!
Roger Lascelles,London
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