CRANBOURNE STAR NEWS
Home » Level crossings to go

Level crossings to go

The State Government has announced it will remove the last four level crossings along the Cranbourne line including a duplication of the track starting next year.

These works include building a new Merinda Park Station with two new platforms and better facilities for the 1,100 passengers who use it each weekday.

The line upgrade will be delivered in stages and cost more than $1 billion. The duplication will also enable trains to run every 10 minutes.

Work is already underway to build a new road bridge over the rail line at Evans Road, with the Greens Road level crossing in Dandenong South the next to go.

A new rail bridge over the road will replace the Greens Road level crossing with detailed investigations confirming this as the most suitable design.

Work will start in 2020 and the crossing will be gone by the end of 2022.

Work will also start next year to construct eight kilometres of new track between Dandenong and Cranbourne, removing single-track bottlenecks that stop running more services.

These duplication works – including the rebuilding of Merinda Park Station – will be completed by 2023.

Eleven level crossings have already been removed on the Cranbourne line, with further technical investigations and community consultation to come for crossings at Webster Street in Dandenong and Camms Road in Cranbourne.

These crossings will be removed by 2025 to make the Cranbourne line the first to be level crossing-free.

About 39,000 vehicles currently travel through the remaining Cranbourne line level crossings each day, and that figure is forecast to grow by about 41 per cent to about 55,000 by 2026, the Government says.The Government says the Cranbourne Line Upgrade, together with the Metro Tunnel, will boost reliability, frequency with room for 121,000 extra peak hour passengers each week and travel times cut by up to 50 minutes a day.

It also paves the way for a future extension of the line to Clyde, with planning underway.

The Labor Government is also upgrading Thompsons Road and Hallam Road and delivering significant power, signalling and platform works to enable the rollout of bigger, better trains.

“This unprecedented investment in rail and road for Melbourne’s booming south east is vital to allow locals to get home safer and sooner,” Minister for Transport Infrastructure Jacinta Allan said.

Cranbourne MP Pauline Richards said: “This is exciting news for our community – delivering a brand new station and room for more trains, more often.”

 

Digital Editions


  • EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 228738 The state’s pollution watchdog says it remains opposed to a new toxic-waste cell at a controversial hazardous-waste landfill…

More News

  • Melbourne set to take on North Melbourne in Casey Fields practice match

    Melbourne set to take on North Melbourne in Casey Fields practice match

    Local AFL fanatics are in for a treat, as Casey Fields will take centre stage when Melbourne takes on North Melbourne in a practice match bringing elite AFL action to…

  • Drunk driver sentenced for fatal, high-speed crash

    Drunk driver sentenced for fatal, high-speed crash

    A Clyde North drink driver who lost control at a Tooradin roundabout at high speed resulting in the death of his friend has been jailed for at least five-and-a-half years.…

  • What’s on

    What’s on

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 489780 CaseyGirlsCan Tennis at Hampton Park Free, coached beginner tennis sessions for Casey women, no prior skills or knowledge of tennis required. Follows the…

  • Cranbourne commuters question train reliability

    Cranbourne commuters question train reliability

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532942 Performance data shows the Cranbourne Line has broadly tracked close to Melbourne’s network-wide averages for reliability in recent years, but commuters say delays,…

  • New rules ban interest on hardship-deferred rates

    New rules ban interest on hardship-deferred rates

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 429633 Ratepayers facing hardship are expected not to be charged interest on deferred rates under new State rules. Casey has confirmed that it already…

  • Champs, chats and chokes

    Champs, chats and chokes

    DAVE: Good morning boys, what a massive week of sport; we’ve a had a Pro-Am series through West Gippsland, the Woolamai Cup was on, Country Week has begun, and then…

  • New threatened species facility opens at Moonlit Sanctuary

    New threatened species facility opens at Moonlit Sanctuary

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531518 Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park in Pearcedale officially unveiled its new purpose-built Aquatic Fauna Conservation Facility on Tuesday 10 February. Featuring precise environmental…

  • Calls for more foster parents as crisis mounts in Victoria

    Calls for more foster parents as crisis mounts in Victoria

    Lynn, a Casey local, stumbled on a television commercial about foster care at 65 years old. Piquing her interest, the Tongan-born mother of five, decided to do some more online…

  • Former Casey Mayor diagnosed with MND

    Former Casey Mayor diagnosed with MND

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 182116 Ex two-time Casey Mayor and VFL footballer Geoff Ablett has been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease (MND), prompting his family to launch a…

  • Cobras strike and Maroons rally in Turf 2 action

    Cobras strike and Maroons rally in Turf 2 action

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533005 The Dandenong District Cricket Association (DDCA) Turf 2 competition is heating up with the top three tightly contested and Parkfield holding onto top…