The station used to be on the
Hutt Valley Line section of the
Wairarapa Line until 1 March 1954, when the Melling-Belmont section of the line on the western side of the
Hutt Valley was closed and the through line to Upper Hutt and the Wairarapa rerouted through the centre of the valley. The truncated line to Melling via the Western Hutt Station was then electrified. In the 19th century, the line from Wellington to the Hutt and the Lower Hutt Station were opened on 14 April 1874. A new station building was erected in 1892, containing a ladies as well as a general waiting room. A large new Lower Hutt Station building designed by
George Troup was opened in 1906. The line from Lower Hutt to Petone was double tracked in 1905, although not completed to Wellington until 1911. The second (double) track from Lower Hutt to the Hutt Valley Junction was removed by 1958. Hoy remarked in 1968 that
"the platform is still one of the longest in the district and a two-coach Melling train is lost in the middle". At one time the station had an "infamous" manure siding, to which loads of horse manure from Wellington streets were railed in a special "manure train". The station was still an important goods facility after 1954, but in 1981 the Melling Branch lost the last of its freight traffic when the goods facilities at Lower Hutt station were closed and the local goods shunts to Lower Hutt ceased. Goods handling was transferred to a new facility at Gracefield. Lower Hutt station was renamed Western Hutt railway station following the opening of the
Waterloo interchange on 26 November 1988. The building is now leased to various shops and businesses, and is called
The Station Village Complex . == Services ==