St. Peters Railway Station is located on the Princes Highway (aka King Street) near the intersection with Sydney Park Road, to the west of the Princes Highway rail overbridge. The station is accessed via a footbridge from Lord Street, Newtown, and via a pedestrian pathway and then footbridge from the Princes Highway. The railway station is within a cutting with high brick retaining walls. There are two island platforms: Platform 3/4 on the southern side, and Platform 1/2 on the northern side, and another disused and overgrown island platform on the northern side of the station adjacent to Lord Street. The station complex includes the Platform 3/4 building and three island platforms (1884), brick retaining walls (1900), footbridge (1914), King Street (Princes Highway) overbridge ( 1900), overhead booking office and shop (1914, altered in 1949 and 1999) and platform 1/2 canopy (1990). ;Platform 3/4 building (1884) This is a painted brick third class single storey platform building, with an
awning the full length of the building on the southern side, and an awning along part of the length of the building on the northern side. The building has two brick
chimneys to a gabled corrugated steel roof. Awnings to Platform 3 have a decorative metal valance to the ends of the awning (note: this pattern also occurs at Sydenham). The building features moulded stucco sills and heads to windows, original late Victorian period timber double doors with arched
fanlights, each fanlight having two vertical glazing bars. Windows are timber framed double hung. There is a timber tongue & grooved door opening onto Platform 4. The Platform 4 awning has a timber bargeboard and timber valance, and is cantilevered on steel posts and
brackets. There is stop chamfered
brickwork to window and door openings. The interior is as follows: From east end: Room 1: very high plaster ceiling with plaster
ceiling rose,
marble mantelpiece, deteriorated timber floor, some wall linings missing. Room 2: ripple iron ceiling with metal ceiling rose, timber floor, fitted timber seating. Timber floor and fitted timber seating has visible termite damage. Room 3: timber floor,
chimney breast, high plaster ceiling with plaster ceiling rose. Room 4: toilets with ripple iron ceiling with metal ceiling rose. Toilet fit out features toilet cubicles with late Victorian period timber 4-panel doors and
architraves (possibly salvaged from elsewhere). Otherwise c.1970s toilet fit out. It was reported to be in moderate condition as at 28 June 2009, with some damage to timber. ;Island platforms (1884) There are 3 island platforms: at the northern edge of the station adjacent to Lord Street a disused overgrown island platform; Platforms 1 and 2 with partly brick edges, partly concrete edges, and asphalt surfaces; and Platforms 3 & 4 at the southern side of the station with brick edges. Platform 4 is curved on its southern side. ;Brick retaining walls (1900) Brick retaining walls extend both sides of the railway station, and extend to the eastern side of the brick overbridge. ;Footbridge (1914) Access to the station is via a footbridge with a
Dorman Long & Co steel structure with two sets of taper-haunched girders - one set for street access, the other for platform interchange,
stairs, railings and star pattern
newel posts. The footbridge has a hardie-board deck, and two brick supports underneath. ;King Street (Princes Highway) overbridge ( 1900 Brick overbridge over all lines. ;Overhead booking office and shop (1914, altered 1949, 1999) Located on the footbridge, the overhead booking office is extensively altered and includes a fibro ticket office with a
hipped corrugated steel roof and a small fibro shop, also with a hipped corrugated steel roof, and a modern awning structure. ;Platform 1/2 canopy () A modern platform canopy structure with steel posts on concrete bases and a corrugated steel roof. This replaced a 1914 platform building demolished 1995. ;Integrity The Platform 3/4 building is remarkably intact including its interior. The footbridge has been redecked but its otherwise intact. The station as a whole lacks integrity due to the loss of the Platform 1/2 building.
Modifications and dates • 1900: quadruplication of the line, construction of brick retaining walls, new King St overbridge • 1908: platforms extended • 1914: the 1884 Platform 1/2 building was demolished and replaced, footbridges and overhead booking office constructed. • 1949: overhead booking office extensively altered and shop built on footbridge • 1995: The 1914 Platform 1/2 building demolished and platform canopy built in its place • 1999–2000: Footbridge: Hardie board decks and recladding of footbridge buildings; Platform 3/4 building: re-roofed, reinforced glass to some windows; extensive alterations to overhead booking office. == Heritage listing ==