The Barossa Wine Train was a tourist railway in the Australian state of South Australia which, from 1998 to 2003, operated with ex - South Australian Railways Bluebird railcars on the Barossa Valley railway line which had been closed to passengers since 1968.

Barossa Wine Train
The Wine Train at the National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide (April 2014)
Overview
Service typeHeritage railway
StatusCeased
LocaleBarossa Valley, South Australia
First service1998
Last service2003
Route
Line(s) usedBarossa Valley line
Technical
Rolling stockThree South Australian Railways Bluebird railcar
Track gauge5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)

Background

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Due to financial and insurance fallout from the 9/11 disaster, it was forced to cease operations in April 2003.[1][2][3] The train was then put under storage at the National Railway Museum in Port Adelaide under the ownership of John Geber of Château Tanunda.[4]

In March 2015, it was revealed that a consortium were seeking to resurrect the train and had an option to purchase three Bluebird railcars.[5]

In 2023, the Barossa Wine Train Bluebirds were sold to Aurizon but the interiors were kept for future hope to put them into Adelaide Metro's 3000 class railcars for a new Barossa Wine Train.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Wine train plan derailed The Advertiser 10 November 2006
  2. ^ Railways and Colonisation In South Australia, via railmapsa.au.
  3. ^ BAROSSA TOURIST TRAIN, via barossawinetraincampaign.com
  4. ^ BAROSSA NEWS ONLINE, via barossanewsonline.com
  5. ^ "Wine train dream back on track", InDaily, 10 March 2015