Another instalment in my photos from ten years ago series – this time it is November 2014.
A trip to Sydney
I decided to make the trip up to Sydney this month, catching the XPT north from Melbourne.
And being greeted by a light rail vehicle tram as soon as I arrived at Central Station.
I saw a double decker train the next day.
And presumably took some other photos up there, but they weren’t of trains – as I still haven’t uploaded them to my Flickr account.
Then then flew back home to Melbourne – to be greeted by a Myki visitors pack advertisement inside the Qantas terminal.
Along with a SkyBus one.
A decade on and the Myki machines at Melbourne Airport are just as hard to find, and SkyBus is still the only public transport route that runs from the airport to the CBD.
Melbourne Central
I also went on a tour of the Melbourne Central Tower this month, where we got to look out over the roof of Melbourne Central Shopping Centre, towards Myer House and Emporium.
But unfortunately we only got to look down on the glass cone, not look inside like some previous tours did.
Technology
It seems like an everyday scene now, but a decade ago seeing an entire tram full of passengers absorbed in their smartphones was still novel.
But Telstra was still behind the times – rollout out their ‘Telstra Air’ wifi hotspots to payphones, despite almost everyone having stacks of mobile data to use on their phone.
The Wi-Fi network is still in place today, but free since 2023.
Trams
‘Safety’ zone trams stops were still common place in the Melbourne CBD a decade ago – this one was on Collins Street at William Street.
This particular tram stop was replaced by a platform stop in June 2015, with the last safety zones in the CBD upgraded in July 2024. As for the rest of the tram network – the December 2022 deadline to make all tram stops accessible has been and gone, with hundreds still non compliant.
Meanwhile Yarra Trams was coming up with crackpot schemes like a coffee stall taking up precious space for passengers at the Flinders and Swanston Street stop.
Luckily that idea got kicked out very quickly.
A handful of 1970s-era Z1 class trams were also still kicking around the network, with their crappy little sliding windows and only two doors per side – despite having supposed to have been retired a decade earlier in favour of the incoming low floor C and D class trams, but kept on due to increasing patronage.
This particular tram – Z3.86 – was eventually retired in August 2015, following the delivery of the new E class trams.
A different flavour of stupidity are people who drive down Swanston Street – this driver managed to break down in the middle of the tram stop, and drum up help from passersby to get clear of the tracks.
While this confused country bumpkin headed up Swanston Street in their LandCruiser got pulled up by an unmarked police car, and got sent on their way.
And a decade on – nothing much has really changed.
V/Line trains
Here we see an original liveried VLocity train departing Richmond station for the city.
These days the entire VLocity fleet is in the PTV purple livery, the open air ramps at Richmond station are now roofed over, and Eureka Tower has been usurped by Australia 108 as the tallest building in Australia.
Down in Geelong I photographed a 6-car V/Line train approaching the brand new terminus station of Waurn Ponds.
Opened in October 2014, Waurn Ponds gained a second platform in 2022, and the 8 kilometers of track between South Geelong and Waurn Ponds has just been duplicated.
And a V/Line train in are more shocking condition was VLocity set VL12.
Involved in a collision on the Werribee line in August 2014 where a V/Line train passed a signal at stop and crashed into the rear of a Metro train, it had to be dragged to the workshops at Bendigo to be repaired.
The collision resulted in Metro trains rewriting the rules around passing a signal at stop, while VLocity VL12 reentered service in March 2015 as the only 2-car VLocity set to ever wear the PTV livery.
A load of rubbish
After the removal of rubbish bins from Melbourne stations due to the “increased terror alert level”, they all got dumped in a pile at Flinders Street Station.
And the average passenger responded as you might expect – like a filthy pig just leaving their rubbish on the ground.
The bins were eventually returned in March 2015, with the exception of the private management at Southern Cross Station, who still refuse to place any rubbish bins on their platforms.
A different kind of rubbish
It was the leadup to the 2014 State Election, and the Napthine Government was ramped up their ‘Moving Victoria’ campaign, promoting their unfundedthe Melbourne Rail Link project.
Conceived as an alternative to the Metro Tunnel, the Melbourne Rail Link tunnel would have run between South Yarra and Southern Cross, serving new stations at Domain and Fishermans Bend – instead of Arden and Parkville, who would be stuck using buses and trams.
But as you might have guessed, the Melbourne Rail Link project went nowhere, construction of the Metro Tunnel started a few years later and is almost finished, work on the Melbourne Airport Rail project has been stop-start, and a rail link to Fishermans Bend is as far away as ever.
And another piece of pork barrelling I photographed was this Denis Napthine’s $115 million dollar train on the Frankston line – or what the government called the ‘Bayside Rail Project’.
Announced in May 2013, the Bayside Rail Project was promoted as bringing the newest trains in Melbourne – the X’Trapolis – to the Frankston line.
However these trains accelerate faster than anything else in the Melbourne fleet, putting them at risk of beating the boom barriers at level crossings, but because of the upcoming election, it was decided in October 2014, to just run a single X’Trapolis train on the line each morning, but with a speed restrictor on the throttle and two drivers in the cab.
Following changes to level crossing timings on the line in August 2016, the restriction on X’Trapolis trains was removed, allowing any X’Trapolis set to run revenue services to Frankston, and more amazingly a decade later, the bulk of the level crossings on the Frankston line don’t even exist anymore.
And a third kind of rubbish
For decades this ancient advertisement for Medibank Private faced passengers at Melbourne Central platform 1.
But 2014 saw this billboard finally removed from the platform wall, replaced by the ‘Xtrack TV’ digital screens with their insipid loop of advertisements – with audio soundtrack.
And Medibank Private – it’s still just as useless as the rest of the Australian private health insurance system.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
Always nice seeing your photos from 10 years ago Marcus.
Is the ATSB web page about “rewriting the rules around passing a signal at stop” incomplete? Under the heading “Proactive action” and sub-heading “ATSB Response”, that page finishes with something of a sentence with a colon, “Accordingly, the ATSB issues the following Safety Recommendation:” And, what?
Not only are CVM at the airport hard to find, but also the customer help button operator wasn’t even aware of their existence and told me that there were none. It is also user-unfriendly that they don’t accept $100 notes considering that the only denomination international visitors can purchase from overseas banks is $100. What’s worse, they don’t just decline $100 notes, but ingest them. It took me over a week for the reimbursement to be credited to my Myki.
And how many times do we hear about transparency from the Coalition when it comes to funding for projects (such as attacking the government for projects that apparently run over budget) when the Coalition don’t release the costing for their projects (we didn’t get costing for Melbourne Rail Link, but constantly being given a lecture on the cost of Suburban Rail Loop, and no doubt MRL would’ve gone over budget if we knew the cost)? I said it before, and I will say it again, being given a lecture on transparency from the Coalition is equivalent to being given a lecture on how to run a blood bank from Dracula, or being given a lecture on being faithful to your partner from Donald Trump.