By darmansjah
If you stop in Melbourne, Victoria, you should not miss a
visit to Flinders Street Station. Here you will find the railway station with
the Victorian style of architecture. This place is touted as a suburban railway
station busiest in Australia.
Flinders Street Station—colloquially shortened to simply
Flinders Street or sometimes FSS—is a central commuter railway station at the
corner of Flinders and Swanston streets in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It
serves the entire metropolitan rail network. Backing onto the city reach of the
Yarra River in the heart of the city, the complex covers two whole city blocks
and extends from Swanston Street to Queen Street.
Each weekday, over 110,000 commuters and 1,500 trains pass
through the station. It is the most used metropolitan railway station in
Melbourne, in 2009 there was an average of 85,100 passenger boardings per day.
Flinders Street is serviced by Metro's suburban services, and V/Line regional
services to Gippsland.
It was the first railway station in an Australian city, the
terminus for the first use of steam rail in Australia and the world's busiest
passenger station in the late 1920s.
The main station building, completed in 1909, is a cultural
icon to Melbourne, with its prominent dome, arched entrance, tower and clocks
it is one of the city's most recognisable landmarks. As such it is frequently
used to symbolise the city and is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register.
The Melburnian idiom "I'll meet you under the clocks", refers to the
row of clocks above the main entrance, which indicate the time-tabled time of
departure for trains on each line; another idiom "I'll meet you on the steps",
refers to the wide staircase underneath these clocks. Flinders Street Station
is responsible for two of Melbourne's busiest pedestrian crossings, both across
Flinders Street, including one of Melbourne's few pedestrian scrambles.
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