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Register for news updatesA 49km rail trail west from New Norfolk to mountain bike park centre Maydena is an exciting proposition from Derwent Valley Council, but your feedback is required to see it become a reality.
This rail corridor, beginning a 45-minute drive north-west from Hobart, abuts a Tasmanian national park and features picturesque bridges, railway heritage and offers agritourism and adventure-tourism opportunities for townships once the centre of a thriving timber industry.
Rail Trails Australia and Bicycle Network have long championed the reuse of the Upper Derwent Valley rail corridor as the Derwent Valley Rail Trail and are very pleased to see that the Derwent Valley Council’s Upper Derwent Valley Precinct Plan includes multiple suggestions to: “Repurpose the rail corridor as a shared-use rail trail – convert rail corridor to walking and cycling trails providing for local recreation and exercise”.
The Precinct Plan includes creating safe access to the future rail trail from various towns, supporting low-impact camping and caravan parking accessible from the rail trail, renovating stations, connecting the rail trail with nearby agritourism experiences, and realigning the Tasmania Trail onto the rail trail making it an offroad trail. The rail trail would connect the towns of New Norfolk, Hayes, Bushy Park, Glenora, Westerway, National Park and Maydena.
You can read the Precinct Plan here. Please email your feedback to Derwent Valley Council directly at dv*******@*********ov.au. Please include the reasons why you believe a rail trail would benefit the area and how a rail trail in the Derwent Valley would influence your travel plans to Tasmania.
We urge our rail trail community to contact Derwent Valley Council to show their support for a rail trail linking townships and creating an amazing nature-based tourism destination!



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Stay up to date with the latest news about Rail Trails with our free email news.
Register for news updatesIf you live in Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, regional Victoria and NSW, Adelaide and Tasmania and are available to count bik...
Long-standing rail trail supporter Ms Rosamund Lesley Heit has been awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in...
Rail Trails Australia had 289,000 visits to its website in 2025, many by people looking for information on specific rail...
Byron Shire in northern NSW is working on getting approvals and funding for the transition of the 132km rail corridor th...
A 49km rail trail west from New Norfolk to mountain bike park centre Maydena is an exciting proposition from Derwent Val...
Pioneer Valley Rail Trail volunteers Mike and Margie Browne have won an Excellence in Community Project Achievement awar...
Update: as of 25 January 2026, Cycle Dindi 26 has been postponed due to damage to the Great Victorian Rail Trail (GVRT)....
Construction has begun on the next 1.5km stretch of the Yarra Valley Trail in Victoria, which will extend to the Birraru...
We know that rail trails are not exclusively enjoyed by cyclists: horse-riders, runners, walkers and mobility aid users ...
Queensland’s Somerset Regional Council and City of Moreton Bay have confirmed they have undertaken a Multi Criteri...
Hilltops Council is inviting the community to have their say on the Boorowa Galong Rail Trail Concept. The concept explo...
The 2026 Victorian bushfires caused widespread damage to many communities and also severely damaged 2 rail trails in nor...
Northern Tasmania’s Latrobe Council and Kentish Council have released the Latrobe-Kentish Trails Strategy to guide the...
Friends of The Bendigo – Kilmore Rail Trail (FBKRT) continue to improve the O’Keefe Rail Trail, with 2 recent wo...
In December, Logan City Council (bordering Brisbane) decided to proceed with a staged development of the 11.5km section ...
As Rail Trails Australia (RTA) ramps up its efforts to assist New South Wales increase the number of rail trails in the ...
7 comments on “A Stunning New Rail Trail for Tasmania? Let’s Do It!”
You will not get a tourist railway. The State Government props up the West Coast Wilderness Railway. It would shut if the funding stopped. To the Government, it is the one and only tourist railway wanted in the State. No competition.
Simply not enough population to support.
Tourist travelling the State do not have the time to travel on it. Their travel agenda is pre set.
The train when operating, was plagued with mechanical, mechanical operational,bridge,volunteer issues.
HOWEVER…you could operated a heritage train shuttle 6km between Westerway and National Park with a parallel path next to it. Cafe, bistro and bike hire each end. Why take 300 people all day by train to a destination when you can operate a shuttle where already 100000 plus people visit per year?
If I was on a luxury cruise ship for a day or two in Hobart, treated magnificently, spoilt and food prepared by world class chefs, would I spent day on an old stodgy stale 50's train served salad rolls and instant coffee!
Jeezzzuuss Christ…What the f…?! What grass are you people smoking?
Poor old Dorset Council has been struggling since 2014 to establish what could Australia's premier rail trails. In the upper house leader the party you have a train enthusiast living in the valley who is anti rail trail.
Victoria, introducing and establishing Australia's first rail trails without a hint of objection. Yet those loonies objecting in the North East, creating terrible harm to honest and hard working Nayor. Meanwhile back at New Norfolk the dreaming train enthusiasts live in hope of running trains to National Park, 35 years after theyv formed a rail preservation society. I have never know a State that gas so much infighting and disagreement that it self harms itself.
That's ok for you to say, provided, you either live in the Derwent Valley, or are prepared to pay to use the proposed trail, as I live there, and would be expected, as a ratepayer, to contribute to its upkeep, and probably its building! I personally would prefer to see a financial commitment, all Stakeholders , local, state, federal, and private equity, to re establishing a rail line, as a tourist venture, and would appeal to the wider community as a visitor attraction to the Derwent Valley!
Having been to the area a few times and walked in the Mount Field National Park, I can only agree that it would be a wonderful rail trail, possibly one of the best in the country. However some caution needs to be exercised because the eventual reactivation of the rail way is also part of the long term plan for the Derwent Valley Rail Museum, see https://www.dvr.org.au/our-plan
The line was once used by railway preservation groups with steam as far as Mt Field and it was quite magnificent. Sadly, rail preservation groups are no longer allowed on Tasmanian mainlines and so the Derwent Valley Museum is currently limited to only a few kilometers of track near the Museum.
While I am certainly an absolute a supporter of rail trails, I'm sure that one of the prerequisites must be that the line will not be reactivated for any reason and that the trail must not hinder any reactivation and therefore consultation and cooperation with the Museum would be essential for any Rail Trail plan
I agree with Jeff. As a keen road and MTB bike rider plus member of Bicycle Network I would appreciate the new trail trail but would not be happy to remove the possibility of the rail corridor being reinstated for steam trains etc in the future. I missed out on riding on the train when it did operate but I did follow along with the train in my car, it was a truly amazing sight to behold. I am quite alarmed at what the State Government and the New Norfolk Council are doing and I would have thought a full feasibility study report into the options for the train line should prepared followed by a decent length and thorough public consultation on either reinstating the train line or converting it to a rail trail ONLY IF the train line option is not viable or supported.
Fantastic idea, hope it comes to fruition
Rgds Dion Dillon
Hooray….a positive progressive response. Well done.