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]]>Yep, it’s cooked
Three out of the seven displays are barely visible – leaving the next seven V/Line departures MIA, along with the entire list of V/Line arrivals, and all services on the Cranbourne, Pakenham and Frankston lines.
But luckily you turn around and find a second set of screens – only to discover half these ones are also broken – you can now see the Cranbourne, Pakenham and Frankston lines; and the V/Line arrivals are nice and bright; but the Lilydale, Belgrave and Glen Waverley line are gone.
And the next seven V/Line departures – if you squint hard, you might just be able to read them on the faded screen.
And don’t hope on walking over to the platforms either – the screen at the top of platform 11 and 12 was also hardly visible.
As was the one above platform 15 and 16.
But why?
The reason for the screens not working? The screens aren’t broken outright, as they work most of the time.
The clue being in tiny text in the corner of the screen – ‘TEMPERATURE WARNING!!’. I photographed the failing screens on December 5th, when the top temperature was 33.2 °C, and that was enough for the the screens to be unable to cope.
I found a similar warning on one of the platform screens on February 4th – when the top temperature was 37.5 °C.
So in theory a simple fix – but the management at Southern Cross Station can’t even change a light bulb.
And they aren’t that old
You might point the finger at the screens being old, but that isn’t exactly true – for years Southern Cross Station used a ‘temporary’ array of CRT television screens to display the next suburban train departures.
The permanent LCD screens not being switched on for suburban trains until March 2009.
Allowing the ‘temporary’ screens to be covered up.
Until they were finally removed in April 2010.
And the LCD screens didn’t last long anyway – they were removed in November 2012 for “maintenance”.
Out of service from November 12 to December 23 – that’s 41 days to change eight screens!
Footnote: another other things cooking in the heat
Melbourne’s Comeng suburban trains from the 1980s also once had a reputation for failing in the heat.
The air conditioning failing once the temperature reached 35 degrees.
So after a spate of failures during the summer of 2008-09, the decision was made to upgrade the air conditioning units fitted to said trains.
And lo and behold – they’re just as reliable as newer trains in hot weather.
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]]>McDonald’s
The McDonald’s in the Melbourne Central basement food court station has a serving window facing onto the concourse at Melbourne Central station.
While the Box Hill Central outlet takes it a step further – a serving window facing into the paid area at Box Hill station.
McDonald’s logo on the station signage.
And the McDonald’s dining room has next train displays on the wall inside.
Red Rooster
It’s not just McDonald’s located in stations – Red Rooster at Southern Cross Station has a “Walk Thru”.
A glass wall separating their counter into paid and unpaid sections.
And a failure
At Melbourne Central Station there is also a KFC service window facing into the Elizabeth Street concourse.
But thanks to it being a dead end for passengers, it has since been abandoned.
(Also blocking the view of the Geoff Hogg mural.)
Footnote: an interstate example
Brisbane Central station also has a fast food outlet inside it’s paid area – a McDonald’s.
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]]>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.
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]]>In the beginning
The story starts back in December 2005, with the introduction of the VLocity trains to the V/Line fleet. Each set consisted of two carriages seating a total of 140 passengers, with a drivers cab at each end. For the peak hour express trains on the Geelong line, they would coupled together three units to make a six car train.
We then saw a politically motivated 20% cut in V/Line fares in 2007, resulting in an explosion in patronage, especially on the Geelong line.
One response to this was the ordering of additional trains for V/Line, who saw their first three-car long VLocity set enter service in August 2008.
But with patronage still growing and suburban and V/Line trains sharing the tracks out of Melbourne, running more services on the Geelong line wasn’t an option. But V/Line had another solution – 7-car long VLocity train, made up of two 2-car sets with a 3-car set.
These trains were introduced to the Geelong line in November 2008 and ran until June 2015, when Geelong trains commenced using the new Regional Rail Link tracks, and the last of the 2-car VLocity trains had been extended to be three cars along.
So what next?
As early as 2011 V/Line knew longer trains would be required – their ‘Initial Strategic Operations Plan’, obtained by the Greens under the Freedom of Information Act, says the following:
V/Line anticipates that by this point in time (2018) a high capacity style DMU will be required for Geelong services. It is expected that these trains would operate in 8- or 9-car consists and would each be able to carry 750 – 800 customers. It is expected that the eight peak hour services would be operated with the high capacity DMUs.
And the Regional Rail Link project also included provision for these longer trains – providing 250 metre long platforms at Footscray, Tarneit and Wyndham Vale stations to cater for a hypothetical nine car long train, made up of three 3-car sets.
But for some unknown reason, they decided only only build a 190 metre long platform at Sunshine, despite plenty of space at the city end for a 250 metre long one.
But in 2016 the State Government’s focus switched to a ‘high capacity next generation regional train’ – from the PTV website:
High capacity next generation regional trains
The 2016-17 State Budget includes $10 million in development funding for High-Capacity Next Generation Regional Rolling Stock to cater for the future needs of regional Victoria.
A next generation high capacity regional train will be commissioned in the coming years to cater for strong patronage growth and provide new peak services.
With V/Line saying in 2017 that nine car trains are possible, but won’t be happening any time soon – from the Geelong Advertiser.
Nine-carriage V/Line trains possible, but no plans for Geelong line yet
23 October 2017The boss of the regional rail network has admitted for the first time nine-carriage trains on the Geelong line are a possibility.
Potential for a mega-train carrying more than 660 passengers comes after calls from commuters and rail experts to reduce peak-time overcrowding on the line.
But while James Pinder said a nine-carriage train was possible, he said it was not a current priority.
Mr Pinder said V/Line’s priority was bolstering its fleet from three to six-carriage trains.
“The (VLocity) train is capable of running in a nine-car configuration. (To run nine-carriage trains) it becomes an issue around infrastructure and number of vehicles (available),” he said.
“We don’t currently have any plans to run nine-car services. To run large numbers of nine-car services we would have to have a look at (increasing) platform lengths.”
On Monday, a spokeswoman for the Public Transport Minister did not say if the Government was considering introducing nine-carriage trains on the regional network.
The Geelong Advertiser understands platforms at Geelong station are long enough for nine-carriage trains — which could open the possibility for Geelong to Melbourne express trains.
Platforms at other smaller stations on the line would need to be extended for a stopping-all-stations Waurn Ponds to Southern Cross train.
Mr Pinder said nine-carriage trains did not run across the V/Line network at present.
And they finally happen
On Sunday 21 June 2020 V/Line ran their first nine car VLocity train on the mainline, taking it from Southern Cross Station to Wyndham Vale and back to test their operation, as well as platform clearances.
Sunshine station being the sticking point.
The last one and 1/2 carriages fouling the junction when the front was stopped at the city end of platform 3.
Or sticking out in front after the rear of the train was brought onto the platform.
These tests were then followed in July 2021 by more testing, this time between Ballarat and Lal Lal, which doesn’t see any V/Line passenger services run along it.
But it took another year for the first nine car train to take passengers – following the 30 May 2022 timetable change.
Passengers in Melbourne’s west now have more space on selected peak services with 9-car VLocity trains running to and from Wyndham Vale Station for the first time.
The longer trains, which have the highest-capacity of any regional commuter train in Victoria, will boost capacity by 50% cent on the busiest part on the V/Line network.
The new 9-car services will run each weekday, with 1 in the morning peak starting at Wyndham Vale and 2 in the evening peak departing from Southern Cross.
As well as improving capacity, the 9-car trains also provide more doors for boarding, reducing crowding in corridors particularly in peak periods.
Platforms will also be extended at Sunshine Station to allow nine-car VLocity trains to stop there in the future.
But due to the short platforms, these nine car services had to run express through Sunshine, as well as Deer Park.
Extending the platforms at Sunshine
With level crossing removal works at Deer Park station regularly closing the Geelong and Ballarat lines, V/Line took the opportunity to finally extend the platforms at Sunshine. In March 2023 the piled foundations were installed.
The real work kicking off in April, with assembly of the steel platform supports.
And pouring of the concrete deck.
They then left the completed section of platform fenced off for a month.
The nine car trains still having to skip the stop.
Until May, when they decided to take down the fence between new and old.
And the introduction of a new timetable from 28 May 2023 adding a stop at Sunshine to the nine car Wyndham Vale services.
However in recent months I haven’t seen a nine car train run – possibly due to a shortage of VLocity railcars following the retirement of the H set locomotive hauled carriage fleet.
And so they choose to cut down a nine car train to six cars, than a six car train to three.
And now to Melton?
In May 2021 the State Government announced that funding would be provided to allow nine car VLocity trains to run to Melton, a promise repeated in October 2022.
And reiterated yet again in March 2024.
The Melton level crossing removal works will help introduce larger nine-car VLocity trains as part of the $650 million Melton Line Upgrade, increasing capacity for passengers by 50 per cent and creating 1,000 jobs during construction – while making roads safer and less congested for pedestrians.
To support the introduction of nine car trains, a new train stabling facility is being investigated at Cobblebank where trains could be stored when they are not operating, further supporting local jobs in construction and ongoing maintenance.
But look at what else was happening at the same time – a brand new station at Deer Park was opened in April 2023, with platforms only 215 metres long – half a carriage (10 metres) too short!
That flew under the radar until August 2024, when the State Opposition gave a media drop to the Herald Sun, and then it was all over the news.
Footnote: it’s not just platform length
The new platform extensions at Sunshine also happen to be ~100mm higher than the existing platforms.
This happens to be a new platform height standard, which was also used at Deer Park station – and happens to be incompatible with the outward swinging plug doors fitted to V/Line’s Sprinter railcars.
And so those trains are banned from stopping at the new platforms.
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]]>Regional Rail Link
The Regional Rail Link project was now approaching the finishing line, with a ‘consolidation train’ running back and forth over the newly laid tracks to bed them down before the commencement of revenue services.
The new platforms dedicated to V/Line services at Footscray were also open.
As restoration works continued on the station buildings.
The new platforms were also ready for 9-car long trains, the first of which didn’t run until 2022.
The new dual gauge tracks across the North Melbourne flyover also opened for trains, but not successfully – the Sydney-bound XPT derailed on the first attempt to leave Melbourne!
The cause of the derailment – the new tracks were incompatible with the wheel flange profile used on New South Wales trains.
And elsewhere on the rail network
The original blue/green and purple VLocity train liveries still dominated the view at Southern Cross Station.
Work had started on the 664 Collins Street development atop the south end of Southern Cross Station.
The escalators at North Melbourne station where entering a steep decline into unreliability.
Myki gates at stations were also failing regularly.
And Metro Trains – they were using the next train displays at Richmond station to promote the Channel 7 TV show ‘House Rules’.
Views that are gone
This view of a V/Line diesel headed over to the South Dynon locomotive depot was an unremarkable sight at the time, but today is hidden beneath the tangle of flyovers for the West Gate Tunnel at Dynon Road.
As were these trains at the Wagon Storage Yard at North Melbourne – now taken over by the Wurundjeri Way extension.
At Footscray station there was only a single small apartment tower to be seen – not the dozens found there today.
And you’d be hard pressed to guess that this scene is now the site of the Metro Tunnel portal at South Yarra – this private garage and car park was cantilevered over the railway cutting on Arthur Street.
And these trees cover Siding Reserve, which has been completely rebuilt to make way for the new railway tracks passing beneath.
Trams
A decade ago route 78 passengers were still having to put up with clunky old W class trams trundling down Chapel Street.
As did route 30 passengers on La Trobe Streets – the old clunkers finally being sent off into retirement in December 2014.
Meanwhile on William Street was a sign of the future – a brand new E class trams headed through on test. However it took until December 2021 for these trams to carry passengers on route 58.
Buses
The transition from National Bus to Transdev Melbourne started back in August 2013, but buses in the old liveries could still be seen on Hoddle Street.
And the Melbourne Visitor Shuttle bus was still kicking around, before it was discontinued in 2017.
Some loose ends
The big stadium in Docklands was still called ‘Etihad Stadium’.
Beside the Monash Freeway at Church Street in Cremorne, I found this small part under construction, on what was once a freeway off-ramp.
And a random photo I took of the Geelong skyline – the Kardinia Park light towers in place, but not the massive new grandstands.
And the view of Saint Mary of the Angels Basilica still dominated the skyline, with the office and apartment towers still to come.
And an Melbourne Airport Rail note
At Footscray station I found a giant banner linked to the Napthine Government’s ‘Moving Victoria’ campaign, promoting their unfunded ‘Melbourne Rail Link‘ project.
With a promise of trains running every 10 minutes to Melbourne Airport.
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.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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]]>Regional Rail Link
These has been an ongoing theme for many months now, but ten years ago Regional Rail Link was nearing the finishing line – the finishing touches were being applied to the new platforms at Footscray.
And the site offices were being cleared away.
The road under rail grade separation on the Sunbury line at Anderson Road was open to traffic.
Noise walls were going up beside the existing railway line around Ardeer.
And the new railway through Wyndham Vale.
Wyndham Vale station looked ready for trains.
But the street entrance was boarded up – the first train was still a year away.
V/Line trains still sharing the suburban tracks into North Melbourne station.
But Ballarat trains were snaking across the new tracks to use the new country platforms at Sunshine station.
Flinders Street Station
Metro Trains Melbourne was more interested in making money at Flinders Street Station than running trains.
Leasing the site of the long abandoned platform 11 for the construction of a bar.
With views of the Yarra River.
The station also gained a massive video wall on the concourse, screening an endless loop of advertisements.
They didn’t stop until 25 November 2022, where an activist covered it with paint, shutting it down until June 2023 when a replacement screen was installed.
Southern Cross Station
V/Line’s fleet of A class diesel locomotives were still in frontline service a decade ago.
While the western end of Southern Cross Station was a much brighter place.
But not for long – work on the 699 Bourke Street development atop the station was underway.
The work supposedly the reason for the failed lighting above the platforms, which has never been fixed.
New signalling
The Kensington Racecourse Essendon Signaling Project (KRESP) was wrapped up on the Craigieburn line.
The old signalling equipment placed trackside waiting collection.
The project enabled the retirement of the 1885 signal box at Flemington Racecourse, 1918 signal frame at Kensington, and 1969 signal panel at Essendon.
Trams
The last of the Z1 class trams were still in revenue service, but apprantly not too reliable – this one was being followed by mechanics onboard tram recovery truck ‘R10’.
And motorists were having trouble figuring out the bike lanes on Swanston Street – like this wanker driving a BMW through the tram stop at A’beckett Street.
While at the nearby State Library tram stop was the aftermath of an even less competent driver.
And new liveries
June 2014 was the first V/Line train painted into the new PTV ‘shard’ livery – VLocity railcar 3VL40.
The shiny new colors a contrast to the faded livery the rest of the VLocity fleet was then wearing.
The move to PTV colors had also started on Melbourne’s bus fleet, with Westrans moving away from their corporate livery, before their eventual rebranding as part of CDC Melbourne.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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]]>Regional Rail Link
The Regional Rail Link project has been an ongoing theme in this series, and this month we see progress on the rebuidling Footscray platforms 3 and 4 for V/Line trains.
With V/Line services still sharing the tracks with suburban trains, such as this since-retired P class hauled push-pull train.
And this also retired A class locomotive-hauled train.
The tracks towards Sunshine were already in place, but still being finished off.
As was the junction for Bendigo trains at Sunshine.
The trees found at what was once David Matthews Park were still in place, but they’ve since been cut down – the land sold off for townhouses.
Southern Cross Station
At the entrance to the station the Water Tower Clock was ready to be unveiled.
A big red curtain erected over the top.
Ready for the unveiling held on 14 May 2014.
Meanwhile at the other end of the station, work was still underway on the 699 Bourke Street development.
While trains continued to use platforms 13 through 16 down below.
Note the lights on the ceiling were still operational – they failed a few months later and have never been fixed.
Myki receipts
Remember when unwanted Myki receipts used to cover railway stations and tram stops all over Melbourne?
That problem wasn’t fixed until June 2019!
The crumbling station building at Newmarket
In 2013 I noticed that the foundations of the station building at Newmarket was falling apart, with Metro deciding to demolish the station.
But after a public outcry they backpedaled, adding a web of steelwork beneath the building, and replacing the cantilevered verandah with a freestanding steel structure, which is still in place today.
Ding ding on the trams
Remember the Colonial Tramcar Restaurant?
I also found a faded ‘Bumblebee’ tram headed down Bourke Street.
They’re still used on route 96 today, but have since received a refreshed PTV livery.
Over on Collins Street, the recently installed plastic kerbs along the tracks didn’t do much to stop taxi drivers making u-turns in front of trams and getting t-boned.
A problem not solved until 2022, when much higher concrete barriers were installed.
Rickety old W class trams were also still being used on route 30 across the top of the CBD.
They were finally demoted to the City Circle from December 2014, and replaced by modern E class trams in November 2020.
Meanwhile at Footscray, things look the same as today.
The high-floor Z3 class trams having received a stop-gap refurbishment in 2021 so they can stay in service until the arrival of the ‘Next Generation’ G class trams.
And outside Yarra Trams head office on William Street, the RTBU Tram and Bus Division was holding a rally in the lead up to their 2015 Enterprise Bargaining Agreement.
Tram and Bus Division secretary Phil Altieri addresses the rally.
Along with Labor MP and then-Shadow Minister for Road Safety Luke Donnellan.
A bus
Around Footscray the Westrans brand was still in use.
One of a number of bus operators owned by Kefford Corporation , in October 2014 it was rebranded as CDC Melbourne, and the buses progressively repainted into PTV livery.
To spend a penny
I was at Parliament Station and photographed the public toilets located beneath Gordon Reserve.
Opened c1924, they’re still in use today, unlike many other underground toilets in Melbourne.
And around the corner at Nicholson and Albert Street I snapped a cast iron public urinal.
One of eight surviving urinals around Melbourne which are heritage listed.
And the rest
The former MMBW House at 120 Spencer Street was a 25 story dull grey office tower completed in 1979 as the head office of the Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works, which got an early-2000s facelift with the addition of a bright red band across the top.
But in 2014 it scored a millennial greige makeover.
The anodised aluminum cladding being painted over in a dull generic grey.
And since then it’s gone even more millennial – site of a WeWork coworking space.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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]]>Regional Rail Link
As with previous months, I was following progress on the Regional Rail Link project which was constructing new tracks from Southern Cross through to Wyndham Vale.
At Footscray station the new V/Line platforms were taking shape.
As well as the new tracks through Middle Footscray, passing through compulsorily acquired houses and a piece of parkland.
At Sunshine the junction between the Ballarat/Geelong and Bendigo lines wasn’t quite finished.
And at Anderson Road on the Sunbury line the level crossing was still in place.
Excavation underway to take the road beneath the new bridge spans.
At Deer Park the junction for the new route through Tarneit and Wyndham Vale to Geelong was in place.
But the track beyond was still to be laid.
However the car park and station buildings were complete at Tarneit.
And track laying was underway from the Geelong end.
Farewell to the Hitachi trains
Steamrail Victoria ran a farewell tour for the ‘Hitachi’ trains in April 2014.
Heading around the City Loop a few times, with the windows down of course!
And to newer parts of the suburban network, such as South Morang.
More trains
Steamrail Victoria also took their then-125 year old steam locomotive Y112 out for the trip around the suburbs.
While V/Line was still using diesel locomotives and carriages from the 1950s in frontline service.
Out at Craigieburn I photographed the oddball ‘flipdot’ LED next train displays.
And atop Southern Cross Station work was underway on the 699 Bourke Street development.
While down below, the lighting for platforms 13 and 14 still worked – it failed in early 2015 and is still yet to be repaired.
Ding ding on the trams
A decade ago the maroon liveried City Circle trams were still looking around the CBD – they’ve since been upgraded to ‘W8’ standard.
Route 86 was stuck with the rickety D2 class ‘Combino’ low floor trams.
And on Swanston Street the 1970s-era ‘Z1’ class with no air conditioning and useless windows were still in service.
April 2014 also saw a number of tram stops on La Trobe Street closed to passengers, as they were too short for the new ‘E’ class trams to stop at them.
But upgrades were underway as well – such as a complete rebuild of the tram junction at Victoria and Nicholson Street in Carlton.
Clueless drivers
What’s worse than one idiot driving through the Bourke Street Mall? A gang of idiots following them.
At least this nuffy got pulled over by the cops.
And government propaganda
The State Government’s “Moving Victoria” propaganda campaign was in full swing ready for the 2014 State Election, promoting ‘Major road upgrades’.
‘New trains, trams and buses’.
And ‘East West Link‘.
The latter project being cancelled after the election, only to float back up like a turd every four years.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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]]>A few things new on the trams
A decade ago route 57 was my local tram route, and one night I heard something different clattering down the road – a brand new E class tram on test.
So I got in the car and chased it down the line, snaking around the reserved track of Maribyrnong until it reached the route 82 terminus at Footscray.
A decade ago I was also still commuting to the CBD for work, when I found some brand new yellow plastic kerbing in place along the Collins Street tram tracks.
Intended to make life difficult for motorists driving over the tram tracks, they didn’t seem to deter the nuffies who drive taxis in Melbourne.
Continuing to block the tram tracks and make u-turns as they please.
A problem not addressed until 2020 when the yellow plastic strips were replaced with hard concrete ones – and reducing vehicle-to-tram collisions by around 30 per cent.
And on the trains
A decade ago a new style of door handle was first trialled on the aging Comeng trains.
Eventually rolled out to the entire fleet, but in 2024 an even more secure emergency door release system on the cusp of being rolled out – just in time for the Comeng trains to be retired!
More clueless drivers
Occasionally trams need to turn back before their usual terminus, with one of these crossovers being the Maribyrnong River crossover on Maribyrnong Road, Ascot Vale.
Unfortunately this motorist didn’t realise the tram in front wanted to come back the other way – perhaps forgivable, given it’s an infrequent occurrence.
Meanwhile this driver of a Queensland registered car didn’t know what to do on Swanston Street when the road ran out, so decided to drive along the bike lane instead.
But this taxi driver should’ve known better – the tram driver going DING DING DING but the driver still decided to sneak down the tram tracks.
And this even stupider driver deciding to driving advice from a taxi driver, and follow them.
Another ‘professional’ driver was behind the wheel of this delivery van, who also decided to drive down the Swanston Street tram stop.
But unlike all the other clueless drivers this month, they didn’t get away with it – Victoria Police officers pulled them over afterwards.
Over to Moonee Ponds
Here we see the old Moonee Ponds Junction tram stop, with route 82 passengers forced to cross multiple roads to reach the narrow ‘safety zone’ tram stop on the other side of the intersection.
The tram stop was eventually rebuilt in 2016, with route 59 and 82 trams sharing a new accessible platform stop, next to the bus interchange.
Also nearby I found a route bus operated by Moonee Valley Coaches.
They continued operating two bus routes from Moonee Ponds towards Brunswick until March 2024, when the routes were sold to much larger bus operator Dyson Group.
And Southern Cross Station
March 2014 saw some more retail outlets being added to Southern Cross Station – this time on the Bourke Street Bridge.
But the congestion on the streets around the station – zero attention being paid there!
Just Grand Prix merchandise stalls to make matters worse!
But this hoarding on the Collins Street concourse had something different hiding behind it.
A big hole with a massive cage of reinforcing bar at the bottom.
So what was it?
I didn’t find out until a few months later.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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]]>Trams
We start off with me being featured in The Age on the subject of a tram stop in Ascot Vale that kept being hit by motorists.
Also on the tram front, I spotted Victoria Police offices pulling over a motorist who drove through a tram stop on Swanston Street.
Meanwhile on Flemington Road I found buses driving along the tram tracks.
Route 59 trams terminating on Flemington Road due to the tram tracks along Mount Alexander Road in Travencore being replaced.
These works also isolated Essendon Depot where trams would park at night, so the route 55 tracks through Royal Park were converted into a temporary stabling location.
Which forced route 55 passengers onto replacement buses as well.
Trains
Regional Rail Link is an ongoing theme in this series, and in February 2014 the original tracks through Footscray towards Sunshine had been dug up.
With both V/Line and suburban trains diverted onto the new platform 1 and 2 to allow the new V/Line track pair to be constructed.
Privately owned automatic lockers were installed at the Swanston Street end of Melbourne Central station, only to be ripped out a few months later thanks to the ratcheting up of the national terrorism alert level.
But one thing that hasn’t changed is junk clogged up the entrance to Southern Cross Station – this month we had the ‘Exhibition of Lost Souls’ to promote the film ‘Wolf Creek 2’.
And a Victorian Government ‘use the Right Water’ promotion on the main concourse.
And something I haven’t seen for a few years – Metro Trains Melbourne at the Chinese New Year festival in Chinatown, giving away free balloons.
Down the pub
Remember the Savoy Tavern opposite Spencer Street Station?
The 1970s pub lay derelict for 15 years, until it reopened in 2014 after a minor refurbishment – only to close again in 2016 when the site was cleared to make way for the apartment tower that is currently on the site.
And a trip to Sydney
A friend invited me up to Sydney to visit, so I decided to turn it into a long weekend and spend the day on the train rather than fly. The XPT departed Southern Cross at 8.30am.
I jumped out for a quick photo at Albury.
Wagga Wagga.
Cootamundra.
And Goulburn.
Before we arrived into Sydney just on 8.30pm.
The next day I visited the usual touristy spots, like Circular Quay.
The Sydney Harbour Bridge.
And the Sydney Opera House.
Which was busy having the front steps replaced.
I can’t go anywhere without taking a photo of a train.
But I’m a fan of ferries as well – modern ones like the Sydney RiverCats.
And the classic Freshwater-class ferries on the Manly run.
I also headed past the since demolished Sydney Harbour Control Tower and the then-incomplete Barangaroo development.
My destination – Cockatoo Island.
A former shipyard.
Unfortunately I didn’t have another spare day to catch the train home to Melbourne, so I was off to Sydney Airport.
Sitting in a cheap seat with Jetstar.
Who luckily took me right over the top of the Craigieburn Train Maintenance Facility in Melbourne’s north.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
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