Another instalment in my photos from ten years ago series – this time it is September 2014.
Regional Rail Link
Yep, I’m at it again, following the progress on the Regional Rail Link project.
At Footscray the widened railway cutting through Fordham Reserve had been partially reinstated.
Right up to abandoned Franco Cozzo showroom.
The backdrop is now filled with new apartment blocks, and the Franco Cozzo site has been turned into the Moon Dog brewery.
While down the line, trees marked the fenced off site of what used to be David Matthews Park.
That park has since been sold off for development.
Out in Albion brand new steel noise walls line the rail corridor parallel to Forrest Street.
A decade later they’re now hidden behind a row of gum trees.
A short distance away at Ardeer station a gravel platform welcomed passengers – along with a two hour wait for the next train, a mere 15 kilometres from the Melbourne CBD.
Thankfully the platforms have since been resurfaced with asphalt, and trains now stop every 20 minutes.
And finally – work had finally started at the future site of Caroline Springs station.
The station was eventually opened to passengers in January 2017.
Terrorism fears
In September 2014 Public Transport Victoria yanked the rubbish bins from Melbourne railway stations as a response to the “increased terror alert level”.
With the response from slovenly passengers being to just throw their rubbish on the ground instead.
The bins eventually returned in March 2015 as transparent plastic bags that resembled a scrotum, with the exception of Southern Cross Station – where they have never returned.
Penalty Fares scaremongering from PTV
August 2014 was the introduction of a new on-the-spot ‘Penalty Fares’ regime.
It allowed passengers caught travelling without a without a valid ticket to pay an on-the-spot penalty fare of $75 by credit card, instead of being issued with a $223 infringement notice that arrived in the mail a few weeks later.
As you might expect, fare evaders worked out it was cheaper to just pay the $75 penalty if you did get caught, and so the scheme was terminated in January 2017.
More Melbourne Airport Rail Link propaganda
With the lead up to the 2014 State Election, the Napthine Government ramped up their ‘Moving Victoria’ campaign, promoting their unfunded ‘Melbourne Rail Link‘ project.
Covering Southern Cross Station with ‘From plane to train in 25 minutes’ propaganda.
On the big screen at Flinders Street Station.
Plastering propaganda stickers on the back of train seats.
On signs at railway stations.
And on billboards, like this one beside Ballarat Road in Albion.
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, and work on the Melbourne Airport Rail project has been stop-start.
Level crossings that are gone
Level crossing removals in Melbourne were few and far between, so I didn’t think much about it when I photographed an X’Trapolis train departing Bayswater station on the Belgrave line.
Or this Comeng train departing Essendon station on the Craigieburn line.
But in 2017 the level crossings at Mountain Highway and Scoresby Road at Bayswater were replaced with rail under road bridges, and in 2018 the Buckley Street level crossing in Essendon was replaced by a road under rail bridge.
Before the West Gate ‘Tunnel’
Another project that didn’t exist a decade ago was the West Gate ‘Tunnel’.
Dynon Road through West Melbourne used to be two lanes in each direction.
With an empty paddock beside the railway bridge.
And you could see the sky above Footscray Road.
But now all three sites are covered by a tangle of freeway overpasses forming what is supposedly a ‘tunnel’, unsolicited proposal conceived by Transurban as a way to increase profits to their shareholders.
V/Line around the place
Just another view of Southern Cross Station, with work on the 699 Bourke Street development underway.
Since then the original purple and green VLocity livery is no more, and only a single Sprinter railcar is left in the red and yellow ‘cheeseburger’ livery.
Locomotive hauled carriages were also still being shunted out on peak hour runs.
The last of the H sets was withdrawn in February 2024, with the N sets soon to follow.
The one thing I did expect to see go was A66 leading a Shepparton service through Moonee Ponds.
The fleet of A class locomotives are now with railway heritage groups, and the Shepparton service has been exclusively VLocity trains since 2022.
Ding ding on the trams
The brand new E class trams entered service in November 2013, and were now starting to dominate route 96 services.
The older D2 class trams being demoted to route 19 services, including one plastered in ‘E class trams on route 96’ advertising.
The tram allocations are the same today, despite the low floor trams lacking any platform stops on Sydney Road.
Melbourne’s prototype high floor light rail vehicles from 1985 were also still in service.
Both were withdrawn a few years later, and eventually scrapped.
Speaking of platform stops, the only recently constructed tram stops in the Bourke Street Mall were closed, so they could rebuilt to a revised platform height.
The Colonial Tramcar Restaurant was still trundling around the streets of Melbourne.
The service last ran in October 2018, when Yarra Trams banned the fleet of the network citing safety concerns.
Another W class tram had been turned into the ‘Tram Bar‘ at the Arts Centre.
Opened in 2011, the tram came and went with the seasons, until permanently closed in January 2015.
And finally, what was then an unremarkable photo of trams at Domain Interchange on St Kilda Road.
Rebuilt in 2013 at great expense to modern accessible standards, in 2018 the interchange was closed to make way for the construction of Anzac station, with route 58 trams being diverted onto a new alignment via Toorak Road, pending the completion of a replacement tram stop in December 2022.
And forgotten bus companies
I didn’t realise it at the time, but a decade ago I photographed a long list of bus companies that no longer exist.
Sita Bus Lines used to use plain white buses on the route 400 service to Melbourne’s prisons.
They were bought by Transit Systems in 2019, but their clapped out poo brown and orange buses can still be seen the western suburbs.
East West Bus Company once ran bus sources in the northern suburbs, as a joint venture between Dysons Group and Reservoir Bus Company.
The joint venture was taken over by Dysons in February 2014, with the East West brand phased out in 2019.
Tullamarine Bus Lines once ran bus routes around Moonee Ponds and Airport West.
They were acquired by ComfortDelGro Corporation in 2018, and merged into the operations of CDC Melbourne.
Moonee Valley Coaches was another bus operator in the inner north.
They were acquired by Dyson Group in 2024.
Kastoria Bus Lines is another smaller operator in the north-western suburbs.
They lost out in the recent Metropolitan Zero Emission Bus Franchise process, and will be taken over by CDC Melbourne from 2025.
I also found a Melbourne Visitor Shuttle bus on St Kilda Road.
Funded by the City of Melbourne, the service was discontinued in 2017 after competition from the Free Tram Zone.
And City Sightseeing Melbourne once ran a hop-on hop-off tourist service with open-top double decker buses.
They suspended operations in March 2020 thanks to Covid-19, and are yet to restart operations.
And a final word
Remember Melbourne Bike Share, with bikes that needed to be pedaled, and docks to return them to?
The service was withdrawn in 2019.
And what about yellow taxis?
A common sight since introduced by Jeff Kennett in the 1990s, the requirement was dropped in 2013 as part of the legalisation of Uber and other so called “ridewhare” services.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
Does anybody know why Sita ran those plain white buses on route 400? They seemed to be pretty diligent about this fleet allocation, from what I could tell.
My theory is they had to use new buses on that route as a contractual condition, but for whatever reason they couldn’t be bothered to adapt their existing livery to that model of bus. (Indeed, they used the same type of buses for route 403, and they didn’t apply the traditional Sita livery to these buses either – although by that stage the PTV livery had been introduced.)
I think it was because 400 was jointly operated with CDC Melbourne, and I do remember that Westrans (now CDC Melbourne) used a plain white bus on 400 as well (the Westrans logo was silver instead of the red which was used at the old Altona depot, where the 400 ran from). I think newer buses are used for the 400 now though.
Route 400 was jointly operated between Sita and Westrans (and still is, but now Transit Systems and CDC Melbourne) so I believe they used plain white buses to try and hide that fact.
Route 900 from Rowville to Caulfield is another jointly operated service – initially Eastrans and Grendas, and it’s now CDC Melbourne and Ventura, and it got around the livery issue by being a Smartbus, which had their own livery.
https://www.busaustralia.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=17737
Interesting! Thanks for sharing that.
Actually you mean Route 900 not 600 (which I believe is operated by Kinetic Melbourne)
Yeah, that’s the one – ooops!
The ‘penalty fares’ were one of most socially inequitable ideas ever seen in Victoria. Those that could pay took their chances and it usually paid off. Those that couldn’t afford the $75 were given a fine (sorry, reported) three times that amount. In a lot of cases, this remained unpaid with extra fees, leading to a cycle debt. Shameful.
100% – for some people the unpaid fines can spiral out of control.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-16/toll-road-myki-fines-leading-to-financial-hardship/7417874
Indeed, N’s are being retired, and there are no longer locomotive hauled services running to Bairnsdale, though I did catch one to Geelong two weeks ago.
Also it appears that the higher speed of the V/Locity does not make up for slightly less acceleration on the trip to Bairnsdale. The V/Locity takes longer, per timetable, than the 5 car N-sets did.
They used the introduction of VLocity trains to Bairnsdale to add stops at Trafalgar, Yarragon, Longwarry, Bunyip, Nar Nar Goon, Tynong and Clayton – so the better acceleration is getting used for something. 😛
https://www.ptv.vic.gov.au/footer/about-ptv/improvements-and-projects/train-and-rail/timetable-changes-on-the-bairnsdale-line/
VLocity trains will soon be introduced to Warrnambool (1 November) with a new timetable on the Geelong and Warrnambool lines on 1 December.
Thanks, that makes more sense, although the V/Locity specs acceleration at 0.9m.s^-2. Just looked up The N class loco, puts out 260kN, when pulling 216 tonnes for a 5 car set, a 1.2m.s^-2 acceleration! Some advantages to diesel electric.
Frequent stopping is not playing to V/Locity strengths at all. Metro giving no clear run express to Pakenham does not help.
Why do they try to brainwash people by saying stuff like “we’re bringing Vlocity trains to this line for the first time ever with the trains able to reach up to 160kmh!” when in actual fact not a lot of the V/line network actually has a line speed of over 115kmh?
Also, I understand adding stops to previous express long distance services means a more consistent timetable for these stations but shouldn’t the main objective be to get from A to B as quickly as possible for the majority of passengers on the train who are travelling further away?
(I guess if the maximum line speed is less than 115kmh it’s only a 2-3 minute time saving)
Will V/Line still run Warrnambool line trains express to/from Geelong when replaced by V/Locities? Looking forward to the current 115km/h trip replaced with something faster!
And is there a timetable upgrade for the Geelong line expected anytime soon, now that the duplication has been done?
A bit of a question about the new bus franchises. As you mentioned, Kastoria routes will be taken over by CDC Melbourne on 1 July 2025, but there are other operators that has a contract that runs until 30 June 2025 (including Ryans for example). Do you know what is happening with the other operators?
Don’t worry, found it (via Reddit).
> Wyndham area – retained by CDC (no change)
> Brimbank area – gained by CDC (was CDC and Kastoria)
> Hume area – gained by CDC (was CDC and Broadmeadows)
> Whittlesea area – retained by Dysons (no change)
> Banyule area – gained by Dysons (was Dysons and Panorama)
> Merri-bek area – gained by Kinetic (was Dysons)
> Stonnington area – retained by CDC Melbourne (no change)
This could lead to an interesting situation when the other contracts are up in 2028 (including Ventura, Transit Systems, Cranbourne Transit, and Sunbury Bus Lines).