Townsville is a city on the north-eastern coast of Queensland, Australia. With a population of approximately 204,541 as of 2026, it is the largest settlement in North Queensland and Northern Australia (specifically, the parts of Australia north of the Sunshine Coast). Townsville hosts a significant number of governmental, community and major business administrative offices for the northern half of the state.
Part of the larger local government area of the City of Townsville, it is in the dry tropics region of Queensland. The city is adjacent to the central section of the Great Barrier Reef. The city is also a major industrial centre, home to one of the world's largest zinc refineries, a nickel refinery and many other similar activities. As of December 2020, $30M operations to expand the Port of Townsville are underway, which involve channel widening and installation of a 70-tonne Liebherr Super Post Panamax Ship-to-Shore crane to allow much larger cargo and passenger ships to utilise the port. It is an increasingly important port due to its proximity to Asia and major trading partners such as China.
Dominant sectors of its diverse economy include arms industry, administration, health and education, manufacturing, energy, transport and logistics. The city is a national hub for renewable energy, in green hydrogen and polysilicon, as well as the centre of CopperString 2032 being Australia's largest renewable transmission project. Townsville is Australia's 'fortress city', home to a large part of the strategic capability of the ADF, offering essential services including maintenance and supply chains including one of the largest military bases in Australia as well as a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) base that can accommodate most military aircraft in service. Townsville is the industrial heart of northern Australia, with a GRP of $15.1 billion in 2023. The city is served by Townsville Airport and the Port of Townsville, the largest general cargo and container port in northern Australia.
Popular attractions include "The Strand", a long tropical beach and garden strip; Riverway, a riverfront parkland attraction located on the banks of Ross River; Reef HQ, which has been under renovation since 2021, a large tropical aquarium holding many of the Great Barrier Reef's native flora and fauna; the Museum of Tropical Queensland, built around a display of relics from the sunken British warship ; Castle Hill or as it was originally known, Cootharinga, the most prominent landmark of the area and a popular place for exercise; The Townsville Sports Reserve; and Magnetic Island, a large neighbouring island, the vast majority of which is national park.
James Cook visited the Townsville region on his first voyage to Australia in 1770 but did not land there. Cook named nearby Cape Cleveland, Cleveland Bay and Magnetic Island.
In 1819, Captain Phillip Parker King and botanist Alan Cunningham were the first Europeans to record a local landing.
In 1846, James Morrill was shipwrecked from the Peruvian, living in the Townsville area among the Bindal people for 17 years before deciding to return to British society when the frontier of colonisation came to the region.
In 1860, George Elphinstone Dalrymple led a maritime expedition to the region from Brisbane. The expedition sailed to Cleveland Bay, finding a vast Aboriginal population. They landed on the shore near where the modern city of Townsville now stands and met with a number of Aboriginal people, giving them biscuits and tobacco. The Aboriginal people started to touch and feel all the expedition members and began "smacking their lips", which Dalrymple interpreted as an indication that they wanted to eat them. Another group of Aboriginal people came down, attacking them with a shower of stones and spears. Dalrymple and his men "were necessitated" to fire upon them, "repulsing them with loss." They landed again near Cape Pallarenda to obtain surveys from the hilltops but decided to descend to their awaiting dinghies as they noticed residents of three Aboriginal camps below were moving in their direction. These people were yelling and dancing "in a very hostile manner," and Dalrymple felt obliged to fire upon them. Dalrymple's group then made an "orderly retreat" to the dinghies, halting at intervals to fire upon those throwing spears. The crew that had remained upon the Spitfire had seen about eight armed Aboriginal men in canoes approaching them from nearby Magnetic Island in an apparent attempt to board the ship. A discharge of a brass gun repulsed them.
Edward Kennedy, a Native Police officer accompanying the group, recalled how his "boys" (the Aboriginal troopers) chased four or five local tribesmen into the ocean. Kennedy then stated that he "left the "boys" in the water, pumping lead and hurling derisive cries at them, neither of which seemed to reach their mark". A member of the expedition who was from a town in the south accidentally shot dead an elderly Aboriginal man. He said that he thought an alligator was stalking him. On the return journey to Port Denison, the group "dispersed" another Aboriginal camp in reprisal for the killing of a shepherd. After the fighting, the "boys" rounded up around 12 women, each taking turns based on their rank in selecting one. "In five minutes, each had chosen their spouse and the ceremony was complete."
The next group of colonists, led by W. A. Ross, arrived at Cleveland Bay from Woodstock Station on 5 November that year. In 1866, Robert Towns visited for three days, his first and only visit. He agreed to provide ongoing financial assistance to the new settlement and Townsville was named in his honour. Townsville was declared a municipality in February 1866, with John Melton Black elected as its first Mayor. Townsville developed rapidly as the major port and service centre for the Cape River, Gilbert, Ravenswood, Etheridge and Charters Towers goldfields. Regional pastoral and sugar industries also expanded and flourished.
The Alligator Creek meatworks was established in 1879. Up to 1500 workers, many who resided in Townsville, would work at the factory. It helped to build up the economy of Townsville. Jack Flowers was a local of Townsville and started working at Alligator Creek when he was 13 years old (in 1913). He worked there for 58 years and would walk from Townsville to Alligator Creek. In 1915, the train line extended from Townsville out to Alligator Creek and in 1946 there was a dispute with workers who left work 15 minutes early to catch the 4:30 pm train back to town and the factory threatened to sack 340 workers reporting that it wasn’t 15 minutes but some had stopped working at 3:45 or 4 pm.
The foundation stone of the Townsville Cenotaph was laid in Strand Park on 19 July 1923. It was unveiled on 25 April 1924 (Anzac Day) by the Governor of Queensland, Matthew Nathan.
Some of the units based in Townsville were:
In July 1942, three small Japanese air raids were conducted against Townsville, which was by then the most important air base in Australia. On 25 July 1942 two Japanese Kawanishi Flying Boats dropped 15 bombs which landed near the mouth of the Ross River, only east of oil tanks in the harbour.Trisha Fielding: Queen City of the North – a History of Townsville, p. 76. Brisbane 2016 On 28 July, one Japanese plane dropped eight bombs near the Garbutt airfield. On 29 July 1942, a single "Emily" Flying Boat dropped one bomb at the Experimental Station of Oonoonba and seven bombs landed in Cleveland Bay where bomb craters are still clearly visible. There were no deaths and structural damage was minimal, as the Japanese missed their intended targets of the railway, the harbour and the airfield and destroyed a palm tree at the Experimental Station of Oonoonba. Although the Japanese aircraft were intercepted on two of the three raids, none was shot down.
The Tasmanian historian Henry Reynolds, arriving into Townsville in 1965 to fulfil a position as a lecturer at the nascent James Cook University, noted the initial impressions the city had on him:
I arrived at the end of the long dry season, which had succeeded an usually poor wet season. Water was scarce. Gardens, parks, open space, the hills around were burnt off and bare. Clumps of dead grass collected wind-blown rubbish. Most of the houses stood up on stumps, perched uneasily between the baked earth and the vast vitreous sky. Townsville scarcely seemed to be a city at all. There was only one long main street, squeezed in between mud and mangroves on one side and the pink-brown granite of Castle Hill on the other. The sun arched high overhead. The shadows were short, sharp and intense. Many of the older people bore on their arms, necks and faces the ravages of a lifetime in the tropics. Almost everything was different - the light, the sky, the birds, insects, trees, the sounds and smells. But there was much that instantly appealed - brief, brilliant twilights, moon-drenched nights and, above all, the trade winds.
In 1971 Cyclone Althea with flooding slowed progress of infrastructural building, but by 1972 James Cook University was established, with ecru academic gowns, quite different to those of older universities. From 1961, only the first years of studies for Medicine and for Veterinary Sciences were offered in Townsville, but the establishment of a new General Hospital at Douglas provided facilities necessary for the establishment of an independent Medical School.
In 1970, Queen Elizabeth II, the Duke of Edinburgh and Princess Anne toured Australia including Queensland. The Queensland tour began on Sunday 12 April when the royal yacht Britannia entered Moreton Bay at Caloundra, sailing into Newstead Wharf. After visiting Brisbane, Longreach and Mount Isa the Royal Family travelled to Mackay. The royal party had a leisurely cruise to Townsville, taking four days to arrive after their departure from Mackay. On the morning of April 20, they were met by The Deputy Mayor of Townsville Mr. T. Aikens, M.L.A. and Mrs Aikens and Mr W.W. Shepherd, Chairman of the Townsville Harbour Board and Mrs Shepherd. The day’s program began with a cavalcade of progress at the Townsville sports reserve. The grounds were filled with crowds and children waving their Australian flag. It was a spectacle for the royal visitors and the local community who came out on the day.
Following lunch on board Britannia, the royal family were driven to the site of Queensland’s newest university, the James Cook University, Townsville campus. In the presence of many dignitaries, HRH Queen Elizabeth II formally granted autonomy to North Queensland’s new educational institution. In 2020, James Cook University celebrated its 50th anniversary with a Treasures exhibition, showcasing 50 collection items from Special Collections, Eddie Koiku Mabo Library, James Cook University, Townsville.
The rare collection item – ‘James Cook University Development: Pimlico to the First Chancellor archival footage, 1960 – 1970’ was one of the Treasures selected for the anniversary year. The 12min film preserved on NQHeritage, the University Library’s Special Collections online repository, shows footage of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II arriving at the official ceremony and being introduced to the official party. Their Royal Highnesses first appear in the film at 6:06 minutes.
On Christmas Eve 1971, Tropical Cyclone Althea, a category 4 cyclone, battered the city and Magnetic Island, causing considerable damage.
In 1973, Indigenous activists Eddie Mabo and Bonita Mabo Mabo established the Black Community School in Townsville, where children could learn their Indigenous culture rather than white culture. Eddie Mabo worked as a gardener at James Cook University from 1967 to 1975. It was at the university in 1974 that he first learned of the implications of the terra nullius doctrine which held that he did not legally own the land he believed was his under the traditional land inheritance system of his people.
In 1981 a land rights conference was held at James Cook University and Eddie Mabo made a speech to the audience where he explained the land inheritance system on Murray Island. The significance of this in terms of Australian common law doctrine was taken note of by one of the attendees, a lawyer, who suggested there should be a test case to claim land rights through the court system. Mabo decided to take on the Australian Government. Perth-based solicitor Greg McIntyre was at the conference and agreed to take the case; he then recruited barristers Ron Castan and Bryan Keon-Cohen. McIntyre represented Mabo during the hearings. The James Cook University Douglas campus library is now named after Mabo.
In 1993, the New South Wales Rugby League announced that a team from Townsville would be admitted to the expanded, nation-wide competition, and the North Queensland Cowboys made their debut in the 1995 ARL season.
In February 2019, Townsville experienced a major flood event, which caused five deaths. Floodwaters damaged approximately 3300 homes and about 1500 homes were rendered uninhabitable.
In the short term, much of the urban expansion will continue to the west and the north, in the former City of Thuringowa. The most significant of these is North Shore Estate, a new $1 billion 5,000-lot housing estate, located close to the Bruce Highway, just north of the Bohle River.
Medium-term city expansion will be focused on two major urban developments that have started in 2017 and 2018. Elliot Springs, a satellite city to the south of Townsville developed by Lendlease, is expected to be home to 26,000 people by 2057. Additionally, the Queensland Government announced it would offer of state-owned land (the former abattoir reserve), just south of the Bohle River, for urban expansion.
The historic waterfront on Ross Creek, site of the original wharves and port facilities, has some old buildings mixed with the later modern skyline. However, the central city is dominated by the mass of red granite of Castle Hill, high. There is a lookout at the summit giving panoramic views of the city and its suburbs, including Cleveland Bay and Magnetic Island. There are a number of parks scattered throughout the city, including three botanical gardens — Anderson Park, Queens Gardens and The Palmetum.
The average annual rainfall is on an average 61 rain days, most of which falls during the six-month "wet season" from November to April. Because of the "hit or miss" nature of tropical lows and thunderstorms, and the powerful influence of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation, variation from year to year is almost uniquely large for such a wet climate, being comparable only to a few cities in the Northeast of Brazil (e.g. Fortaleza). Since records at various urban locations started in 1871 twelve-month rainfalls in Townsville have ranged from a mere between December 1901 and November 1902 at the peak of the Federation Drought, to as much as between February 2025 and January 2026. On average, the driest year in ten can expect only half the mean rainfall, compared to around 64 percent in Brisbane, 68 percent in Sydney, and 72 percent in Darwin.
Rainfall also varies considerably within the metropolitan area; it typically ranges from at central Townsville City to at Woodstock, a southwestern suburb. The wettest 24 hours on record was 11 January 1998, with falling mostly in a 12-hour period after dark, which has since been dubbed the "Night of Noah" by Townsville residents.
| Source: Bureau of Meteorology |
In the 2024 Townsville City Council election, Troy Thompson (Independent) defeated incumbent mayor Jenny Hill, who had held the position since 2012, with a two-candidate preferred vote of 52.62%. Thompson subsequently faced a Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) investigation into allegations he had misled voters about his military, business and educational credentials during the campaign. Thompson had claimed to have spent five years with the Royal Australian Corps of Signals and the SAS Regiment; he later admitted in a May 2024 interview on A Current Affair that he had served only three years as a reservist, largely in the catering corps, attributing the discrepancy to memory issues stemming from repeated concussions. Following a show-cause notice issued by Local Government Minister Ann Leahy, Thompson was suspended on full pay of approximately $225,000 per year in November 2024.After facing a unanimous vote of no confidence from Townsville councillors and sustained bipartisan pressure over 18 months, Thompson resigned in September 2025, stating his resignation was not an admission of wrongdoing and announcing his intention to stand in the subsequent byelection. Leahy confirmed Thompson remained eligible to contest the byelection, which was required to be held within two months of his resignation."
Townsville has several large public assets as a result of its relative position and population. These include the largest campus of the oldest university in northern Queensland, James Cook University, the Australian Institute of Marine Science headquarters, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, the large Army base at Lavarack Barracks, and RAAF Base Townsville.
In 2021, 9.0% of Townsville's population was of Aboriginal or Torres Strait islander descent. In 2021, there were 21,180 people of Aboriginal or Torres Strait islander descent living in Townsville.
CQUniversity first established a presence in Townsville in 2014 with the opening of a Distance Education Study Centre in the CBD. The University quickly felt the demand for a face-to-face teaching presence in Townsville and has since opened a purpose built campus in the city offering many on-campus courses including nursing, paramedic science, business and psychology as well as supporting growing numbers of online students.
The Australian Festival of Chamber Music was an international chamber music festival held over ten days each July in Townsville. Australian Festival of Chamber Music Official Webpage . Afcm.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. The festival has ran between 1991 and 2025, and attracts many acclaimed international and Australian musicians. Townsville also has its own orchestra, the Barrier Reef Orchestra, which presents concerts throughout North Queensland. The Townsville Entertainment Centre, seating more than 5,000 people, is host to many national and international music shows, as well as sporting and trade shows.
The region has many renowned festivals, many which celebrate the international heritage of many that call North Queensland home. The Annual Greek, Italian and Indian Festivals are popular with the locals and tourists alike. The Stable on the Strand is celebrated each Christmas.
The Townsville Civic Theatre is North Queensland's premier cultural facility. Since its opening in 1978, the Theatre has been a centre of entertainment and performing arts, providing an environment to further develop the performing arts in Townsville and the North. TheatreiNQ is an independent professional theatre company based in Townsville, presenting four shows a year including the popular annual Shakespeare Under the Stars in Queen Gardens. Dancenorth Australia is a contemporary dance company based in Townsville, whose works tour all over Australia and the World. Dancenorth is the only performing arts organisation based in regional Queensland to be included in the Australian Government's National Performing Arts Partnership Framework.
The Perc Tucker Regional Gallery is the public art gallery of Townsville. Townsville Council: Perc Tucker Gallery Located on the eastern end of Flinders Mall, the Gallery focuses on artwork relevant to North Queensland and the Tropics. Every second September the gallery presents sculpture artworks and art festival called Strand Ephemera, exhibited over the two kilometre beachfront strip. The City is also home to Umbrella Studios who regularly exhibit and promote the work of artists from the region.
Townsville has been a PechaKucha city since 2012. PechaKucha is a global storytelling platform running in more than 1,300 world cities. It celebrates people, passion, and creative thought through ideas shared visually, concisely and memorably. We are redefining authentic human connectivity through inclusive social engagement and technology. Upcoming and past events can be viewed at PechaKucha Night Townsville.
Townsville City Council and Townsville Intercultural Centre annually organises Cultural Fest in mid August. The festival has been held in various locations across the city over its history, and is currently held on the grounds of James Cook University. The Cultural Fest showcases the cultural diversity of the city and dance, food, and music from different ethnic groups in the region.
The city has several museums. The Maritime Museum of Townsville, also known as the Townsville Maritime Museum, is located as part of the Port of Townsville. Its features include , SS Yongala, and lenses from current and former lighthouses. Maritime Museum of Townsville "...the Townsville Maritime Museum...exhibits a collection of Fresnel lenses from the former...Albino Rock...lighthouses." The Museum of Tropical Queensland (abbreviated MTQ) is a museum of natural history, archaeology and history. In addition to housing artifacts from the wrecks, the museum administers the shipwreck sites for HMS Pandora and SS Yongala. Museum of Tropical Queensland The Museum of Underwater Art (MOUA) features the work of underwater sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor, including the coral greenhouse at John Brewer Reef and the ocean siren at The Strand.
The city has many restaurants, concentrated on Palmer Street in South Townsville, Flinders Street and along the Strand. The city also has a vibrant pub and night-club scene, many of them located in Flinders Street East.
One of the most impressive churches of Townsville is Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Cathedral which was built 1896–1902. St. James' Anglican Cathedral was built in two stages 1887–1892 and 1959–1960.
The Strand is considered the most popular park of Townsville. In 1950, Tobruk Memorial Baths were inaugurated here.Trisha Fielding: Queen City of the North – a History of Townsville, p. 88. Brisbane 2016 The Strand is known for its Rock Pool and for various cultural events which take place here.
Anderson Park covering an area of about 20 ha in the district of Mundingburra is mainly known for its ferns and pandanus. The park is named after William Andersen (1845–1935), the first curator of parks of the city. The park was laid out in 1929. Its design was prepared in 1962 by Allan Wilson, Superintendent of parks from 1959 to 1969.
Townsville Palmetum, a park covering an area of 17 ha with about 300 species of plants, was inaugurated in the South of Townsville in 1988. Most of the 60 species of palms which are native to Australia can be seen here.
The first park in the city centre which was named Anzac Memorial Park later was laid out as early as 1912. A bandstand was built in the middle of the park in 1913.Trisha Fielding: Queen City of the North – a History of Townsville, p. 39. Brisbane 2016
Queensland Country Bank Stadium is the home ground for the Cowboys. It replaced the Willows Sports Complex. The Willows Sports Complex was an official venue for the 2003 Rugby Union World Cup, with three matches played in Townsville. Townsville hosted the popular Japanese national rugby union team. Tony Ireland Stadium, in the suburb of Thuringowa, has an international standard cricket and AFL stadium. Townsville was a host city for the preliminary rounds of the men's (Pool B) and women's (pool A) Basketball competition for the 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games.
The most popular sport in Townsville is rugby league. In addition to the Cowboys in the NRL, Townsville and its surrounding suburbs host a number of local junior and senior rugby league sides in the successful Townsville District Rugby League, including A-grade sides: Brothers Townsville, Norths Devils, Souths, Western Lions and Centrals ASA Tigers. The local league has produced a number of Australian internationals such as Gorden Tallis and Gene Miles.
Touch Football in Townsville is run by Townsville Touch Football, with regular competitions conducted at Queens Park in North Ward. SportingPulse Homepage for Townsville Castle Hill Touch Association . Sportingpulse.com. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. The Colliers Shield is the city's major touch football competition and is contested through the winter months by seven touch football clubs. The city has produced a host of regional, state and national representative players and officials, including 2024 Ron Hanson Medallist Kelly Kennedy, who is the cities most capped international touch football player. In 2010, the city played host to the 6th Masters Trans-Tasman Test Series between Australia and New Zealand, which was held at Queens Park from 11-13 June, marking the first time the two countries had played against each other in the sport's Masters divisions (aged 30 and over) outside a World Cup since 1991. From 2018 until 2020, the city was home to the North Queensland Cowboys NRL Touch Premiership teams, which competed in the now-defunct national-level competition and played home games at Willows Sports Complex.
Townsville is also home to Football Queensland North. Soccer is played by junior participants in the city. Major clubs include MA Olympic, Brothers Townsville, and Saints Eagles Souths FC.
Townsville and Districts Rugby Union run a successful Winter Junior and Senior Rugby Union competition including teams from Ingham, Charters Towers and Ayr. Townsville has produced a number of members of the Australia national rugby union team (the Wallabies) in the past including Peter Grigg and Sam Scott-Young.
AFL Townsville operate a regional Australian rules football league in the region. Jake Spencer is the first local player to play in the AFL. Courier Mail: Townsville's Jake Spencer set for debut with Demons . News.com.au (19 February 2009). Retrieved on 18 August 2011.
Several Australian Test and ODI cricketers have come out of Townsville including fast bowler Mitchell Johnson, Andrew Symonds and James Hopes. In 2012 Townsville hosted under 19 cricket World Cup preliminary matches, semi finals and the final featuring Australia and India.
The Townsville Running Festival is an annual event organised by the Townsville Road Runners that began with the first Townsville Marathon in 1972 and now also includes several shorter .
Townsville is hosting the World Triathlon Multisport World Championships from 15 to 25 August 2024.
The Reid Park Street Circuit is located in Reid Park. Each July since 2009, it hosts the Townsville 400 for the Supercars Championship.
Townsville also has a go cart track and motocross track; Townsville had a 1/4-mile dragstrip, but it closed its gates on 25 August 2012 due to urban development.
Rowing occurs at Townsville & JCU Rowing Club and Riverway Rowing Club. Both clubs cater to competitive masters, social, learn to row and school-based rowing programs. In 2009 the Townsville & JCU club won its first Queensland Club Premiership and in 2010 Riverway club claimed theirs.
Townsville has 3 Tennis Clubs. The Western Suburbs Tennis Club Inc., Tennis Townsville Inc. and Kalynda Chase Tennis Centre. Each year Tennis Townsville host the NQ Open Championships and Western Suburbs Tennis Club host the Townsville Open. These tournaments see Australian and international players competing for up to $10,000 prize money and the opportunity to improve their Australian Tennis Ranking.
Townsville Speedway is a speedway venue located at the Townsville Showground on Showgrounds Road, off Ingham Road. It has also been used for motorcycle speedway and has hosted important events, including the Australian qualifying round of the Speedway World Championship in 1990 and the final of the Queensland Solo Championship on four occasions.
The Townsville Hospital underwent a $437 million redevelopment as of 2011, delivering an additional 100 beds, a four-storey expanded Emergency Department, expanded Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and expansion of oncology services. Queensland Health: The Townsville Health Service District Redevelopment . Health.qld.gov.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. The Emergency Department will be the largest in Queensland.
There are four other public health campuses in Townsville: the Kirwan Health Campus, Kirwan Health Campus . Health.qld.gov.au (21 April 2006). Retrieved on 18 August 2011. the Magnetic Island Health Service Centre, Magnetic Island Health Service Centre . Health.qld.gov.au (4 November 2008). Retrieved on 18 August 2011. the North Ward Health Campus North Ward Health Campus . Health.qld.gov.au (21 April 2006). Retrieved on 18 August 2011. and the Townsville Hospital Dentist, located in North Ward.
In addition there are two private hospitals in Townsville, the Mater Hospital and the Mater Women's and Children's Hospital.
Townsville has a public transport system contracted to Translink, which provides regular services between many parts of the city. Public transport is also available from the CBD to Bushland Beach. Townsville's Hermit Park Bus Service . Hpbs.com.au (1 April 2010). Retrieved on 18 August 2011. Regular ferry and vehicular barge services operate to Magnetic Island and Palm Island. Sunferries Official Website: Magnetic Island Timetable. Sunferries.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. Fantasea Official Website: Magnetic Island Timetable . Fantaseacruisingmagnetic.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011.
Construction of railways in the area of Townsville started as early as 1879, and the first railway line was inaugurated in 1880.Trisha Fielding: Queen City of the North History of Townsville, p. 11. Brisbane 2016 The line to Mount Isa which is used by The Inlander today was inaugurated in 1929. The railway lines to Cairns and Brisbane which are used by the Spirit of Queensland were inaugurated in 1929 as well. The former train station, a very representative building at the end of Flinders Street, was completed in 1913. The present train station of Townsville was opened in 2003.
The Tilt Train service connects Townsville railway station to Brisbane in the south and Cairns in the north. Townsville is a major destination and generator of rail freight services. The North Coast railway line, operated by Queensland Rail, meets the Western line in the city's south."Railways of Townsville" Singleton, C.C. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, July 1954 pp77-84 Container operations are also common and the products of the local nickel and copper refineries, as well as minerals from the western line (Mount Isa), are transported to the port via trains. The Port of Townsville has bulk handling facilities for importing cement, nickel ore and fuel, and for exporting sugar and products from North Queensland's mines. Port of Townsville website. Townsville-port.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. The port has three sugar-storage sheds, with the newest being the largest under-cover storage area in Australia. Building and Structures . (23 March 2009). Retrieved on 16 October 2012.
The city is served by Townsville International Airport. Townsville Airport Homepage . Townsvilleairport.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. The Airport handles direct domestic flights to Darwin Airport, Brisbane Airport, Sydney Airport, Melbourne, as well as direct regional flights to destinations such as Cairns Airport, Mackay Airport, Mount Isa, Rockhampton and Toowoomba. Townsville Airport Route Map Airlines currently servicing the airport include Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar, Regional Express, Qantaslink and Airnorth.
In addition to the 3rd Brigade, other major units based in Townsville include the 5th Aviation Regiment, Army Aviation Units: 5 Aviation Regiment. Fourays.org. Retrieved on 18 August 2011. equipped with MRH-90 and Chinook helicopters, co-located at the RAAF Base in Garbutt and the 10th Force Support Battalion based at Ross Island. Forces Command — 3rd Brigade Community: Units that Support 3 Bdef . Defence.gov.au (4 August 2011). Retrieved on 18 August 2011.
The Army also maintains an Army Reserve brigade in Townsville designated the 11th Brigade. This formation is similar in structure to the 3rd Brigade, in that it has reserve soldiers only. There were also two active cadet units, 130 ACU located within Heatley Secondary College and 15 ACU located on Lavarack Barracks as of 2010, previously located at Ignatius Park College. Cadet Units. Defence.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011.
The Royal Australian Air Force's RAAF Base Townsville, in the suburb of Garbutt, houses the Beech KingAir 350 aircraft from No. 38 Squadron RAAF. This unit operated the DHC-4 Caribou aircraft until late 2009; it re-equipped in the short term while protracted analysis for a more appropriate Battlefield Transport and Utility aircraft continued. This detachment provides support to the Army units in Townsville. The base is also a high readiness Defence asset and is prepared to accept the full range of RAAF aircraft types and other international aircraft.
Townsville is also the staging point for the movement of personnel and materials to the remote parts of Northern Australia and many overseas locations. Informit — Engineering Conference Darwin: Developing Remote Areas; Printed Papers — Development of Air Transport Facilities in Remote Areas (Engineering Collection) . Search.informit.com.au. Retrieved on 18 August 2011.
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