Hartwell railway station

Hartwell railway station is located on the Alamein line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the eastern Melbourne suburb of Camberwell opening as Hartwell Hill on 7 May 1906, being renamed Hartwell on 1 August 1909.

It was originally part of the Deepdene Dasher service that connected Ashburton with Deepdene. After the closure of the Deepdene service in 1927, Hartwell became part of the Ashburton line, which in turn became the Alamein line in 1948.

Hartwell is named after one of the early estates in the area, "Hartwell House", which was the residence of James Irwin, who owned and operated Irwin's Hotel in the mid-1850s which was located on lot 149a the corner of Norwood (now Toorak) and Wattle Valley Roads, subsequently demolished about the time the railway line was built. In the 1850s, Hartwell was a small hamlet known as "Back Creek" named after the creek nearby. The Boroondara Roads Board minutes of meetings noted that c/- Irwin Hotel "Back Creek" was used as a Polling Station.

The station building was originally built as Walhalla station on the Walhalla line, but was moved to Hartwell in December 1938, six years before the Walhalla line closed in 1944. Hartwell is the only station on the Alamein branch to have an island platform. Until the Alamein line was converted from single line to double line in the 1950s, Hartwell was the only crossing loop on the line.

Platforms & services
Hartwell has one island platform with two faces. It is serviced by Metro Trains' Alamein line services.

Platforms 1:
 * Alamein line: all stations and limited stops services to Flinders Street (weekdays) and Camberwell

Platforms 2:
 * Alamein line: all stations services to Alamein