Greg Hunt's 2200 vision: why rebuild rail underground when we can expand? (Parts 2 & 3)

Greg Hunt's 2200 vision: why rebuild rail underground when we can expand? (Parts 2 & 3)
Alastair TaylorOctober 27, 2015

Following on from yesterday - Greg Hunt's Melbourne 2200 Vision is an expensive flop, but... - here is a summary and links to the subsequent episodes on Adam Ford's blog.

Part two centres around looking at the blackspots in the current network and walks through projects which could extend the reach of the network into these areas. Upfield, Alamein, Glen Waverley line extensions and new lines through Fishermans Bend, Doncaster to Ringwood and through Monash and Rowville to Ferntree Gully are all discussed.

Greg Hunt's 2200 vision: why rebuild rail underground when we can expand? (Parts 2 & 3)
Melbourne's rail network with its black spots (in white).
Greg Hunt's 2200 vision: why rebuild rail underground when we can expand? (Parts 2 & 3)
Phase 1 rail network expansion overlaid through the current network's black spots.

In part three, Adam looks at how 26 heavy rail-connected CADs can be used to create a polycentric city; likewise the airport could have two rail lines with the addition primarily of a new outer circle orbital railway from Cheltenham to the Airport.

Greg Hunt's 2200 vision: why rebuild rail underground when we can expand? (Parts 2 & 3)
Why spend all that money "undergrounding" the existing network when you can expand?

Lead image credit: Wikipedia

Alastair Taylor

Alastair Taylor is a co-founder of Urban.com.au. Now a freelance writer, Alastair focuses on the intersection of public transport, public policy and related impacts on medium and high-density development.

Editor's Picks

Coronation Property Group breaks ground at new Chatswood apartment development
MAYD kicks off construction of ultra-luxury ONE Burleigh apartment development in Burleigh Heads
TOGA installs first tower crane at Macquarie Rise as construction gathers pace
Olympic infrastructure fuels residential boom in Maroochydore City Centre
Australian Federal Election 2025: How Labor and Liberal plan to fix the housing crisis