TRAVEL BACK IN TIME
Fremantle Station was commissioned in 1905, designed by William Dartnall, Chief Engineer of Existing Lines of the Railway Department The construction contractor, S.B. Alexander completed the station in 1907, at an estimated cost of £80,000, including goods sheds, running sheds, and the laying out of the marshalling yards.
ARRIVING IN STYLE
The station was built in the Federation Free Classical style and features Donnybrook stone construction on the façade with red face brick infill panels, with ornate wrought-iron station gates in the arched entry to a grand-hall style covered station
PROTECTED HERITAGE
The station was classified by the National Trust in 1974, a conservation plan prepared in 1999, and entered into WA's Register of Heritage Places in 2001. It remains one of the busiest train stations in Perth more than 100 years on.
"There are four separate ticket windows, separate offices provided for the receipt and despatch of luggage, and special provision has been made for handling the large quantity of fish that passes through the station. The lavatories are of the most modern design… which should leave nothing wanting for the convenience of the travelling public.”
— The Daily News, 1 July 1907