Thornbury railway station, Melbourne

Thornbury railway station is a commuter railway station on the Mernda line, serving the north-eastern Melbourne suburb of Thornbury in Victoria, Australia. Thornbury is an unstaffed status ground structure station featuring two side platforms. It opened on 8 October 1889.

History
Thornbury station opened on 8 October 1889, when the Inner Circle line was extended from North Fitzroy to Reservoir, Thornbury station, like the suburb itself, is named after the Thornbury Park Estate, named after a farm owned by settler Job Smith. Smith named the farm after his birthplace in England.

In 1973, both platforms were extended at the down end of the station.

During October 1987, the double line block system between Thornbury and Northcote was abolished, and replaced with three-position signalling, with all two position signals between Thornbury and Merri also abolished. A number of signal posts were also abolished during this time.

In early 1988, boom barriers replaced interlocked gates at the Hutton Street level crossing, located at the up end of the station.

Announced as part of a $21.9 million package in the 2022/23 Victorian State Budget, Thornbury, alongside other stations, will receive accessibility upgrades, the installation of CCTV, and platform shelters.

Platforms and services
Thornbury has two side platforms. It is serviced by Metro Trains' Mernda line services.

Platform 1:
 * all stations and limited express services to Flinders Street

Platform 2:
 * all stations services to Mernda

Transport links
Yarra Trams operates two routes via Thornbury station:
 * Melbourne tram route 11 icon.svg: West Preston – Victoria Harbour (Docklands)
 * Melbourne tram route 86 icon.svg: Bundoora RMIT – Waterfront City (Docklands)