Another instalment in my photos from ten years ago series – this time it is July 2013.
Overview of the carriage yards from the north-east side of La Trobe Street
Regional Rail Link
Work on the Regional Rail Link project will still ticking away, with Sunbury line passengers often having to change to buses at Footscray station.
New tracks had been completed along the edge of Docklands.
But work continued on the route past South Kensington.
Where the old tracks were getting rebuilt.
And at Middle Footscray, where space needed to be created for a third pair of tracks.
The north end of the footbridge at Footscray had been demolished for the same reason.
But work on the 1 McNab Avenue office tower was also underway.
Visible from all over Footscray.
The first stage of Regional Rail Link between the city and Footscray opened in July 2014, with the project completed in June 2015.
Myki
The changeover to Myki was still underway, with ‘Myki Mates’ talking to Traralgon passengers at Southern Cross Station ahead of the rollout of Myki to their line.
Public Transport Victoria also opened a new ‘PTV Hub’ beneath their head office at 750 Collins Street, Docklands.
And a ‘Pop up PTV Hub’ at Southern Cross Station for myki queries during the V/Line rollout.
But the reliability of the Myki system left much to be desired – defective readers onboard trams were still common.
Trams
A decade ago the corner of Elizabeth and Collins Streets still had a tram stop, located a short walk from the Elizabeth Street terminus.
It was eventually replaced with a platform stop located a block to the north in October 2013.
I also paid a visit to the much older trams found at the Ballarat Tramway Museum.
Luckily the sun came out on what was a cold winter’s day.
And back at the depot I found a 1970s advertisement from the State Electricity Commission of Victoria promoting all-electric kitchens.
A case of everything old is new again!
Southern Cross Station
At the far end of Southern Cross Station I paid a visit to the ‘Cavalcade of Transport’ mural – it was still in place, but the rest of the shopping centre had been stripped out for redevelopment.
While at the other end I found a curious sign – a train icon directing me to the ‘Airport Express’.
But it was a lie – the only service them, as is now, was a bus.
In the years since SkyBus has swapped their articulated buses for even larger double deck buses, but they still get stuck in traffic on the run between the CBD and Melbourne Airport.
And the other bits
Down at Avalon Airport I found ex-Qantas 747-300 VH-EBU ‘Nalanji Dreaming‘ still in storage outside Hangar 6.
It was repainted into a white livery in 2016, but was scrapped in June 2023.
Out at Campbellfield I went past the site of Pipeworks Fun Market on Mahoney’s Road.
The market closed in 2013, but opened on a new site in 2022.
On the Monash Freeway I found a set of new fixed speed cameras being installed.
They catch around 7,500 speeding motorists in each direction each year, despite standing out like dog’s balls.
And on the Metropolitan Ring Road works were underway on the upgrade between Edgars Road to Plenty Road.
That section was finished in April 2014, but it only marked the start of a decade of works elsewhere on the Ring Road.
And finally, a giant pile of mX newspapers unopened after the end of evening peak.
The evening commuter newspaper continued to be published until June 2015.
Footnote
Here you can find the rest of my ‘photos from ten years ago‘ series.
Marcus, these photographs are very valuable in terms of the history of Melbourne. Since 2013 the population of Greater Melbourne has increased by almost 23%, and I sometimes wonder whether we are on a path to nowhere – will our public transport ever catch up with the growth with we persist with our present attitudes towards development of the city of Melbourne and transport solutions generally in Australia? Sadly my answer to that is no. Our present attitudes simply result in a greater problem and the solutions more difficult to make.
Melbourne has approximately doubled in population since the 1970s, and at some times of day we’re running fewer services that we used to.
https://melbourneontransit.blogspot.com/2023/01/tt-177-world-class-or-world-worst.html