Track gauge in Ireland


The track gauge adopted by the mainline railways in Ireland is. This unusual track gauge is otherwise found only in Australia, in the states of Victoria, southern New South Wales and South Australia, as well as in Brazil.
The Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway used this gauge between 1840 and 1855, as did the Canterbury Provincial Railways in New Zealand, until conversion to the gauge in the 1860s. The Launceston and Western Railway in Tasmania also used this gauge from 1871, until conversion to gauge in 1888.

Different gauges

's first railway, the Dublin and Kingstown, was built to . The Ulster Railway, taking the Irish Railway Commission's advice, used. The Dublin and Drogheda Railway was proposed to be built to gauge on the grounds of lower costs. The two broader gauges were not used anywhere else. Following complaints from the UR the Board of Trade investigated the matter, and in 1843 decreed the use of.
This gauge was given legal status by the Regulating the Gauge of Railways Act 1846, which specified 4 feet inches for Great Britain, 5 feet 3 inches for Ireland.
In 1846 the UR was re-gauged at a cost of £19,000 and the Dublin and Kingstown Railway in 1857 for £38,000.
The Hill of Howth Tramway and the Dublin and Blessington Steam Tramway adopted the gauge. Dublin's Luas tram system, opened in 2004, uses.

Narrow gauge

Numerous narrow-gauge systems were built, usually as three foot gauge railways. Most are now closed, including one of the largest narrow-gauge systems, that of the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee. The Irish narrow gauge today survives as heritage railways in both the Republic and in Northern Ireland. Bord na Móna uses narrow gauge in the Midlands bogs as part of its peat transport network. There is also a private peat railway on the southern shores of Lough Neagh in Northern Ireland, operated by the Sunshine Peat Company.