cross river rail – Michmutters
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Australia

‘Wins and losses’ for south-east Queensland rail commuters under Cross River Rail plan

Commuters using the new Cross River Rail network will face “wins and losses” when traveling from 2025, a rail lobbyist says.

Under the new South East Queensland Rail Connect plan released on Tuesday several existing rail lines will be rerouted.

The Gold Coast and Beenleigh lines will bypass Central station and travel directly through the Cross River Rail tunnel to Woolloongabba, Albert, and Roma Street stations before continuing northward to the Sunshine Coast.

The Ferny Grove line will be linked up with the Cleveland line instead of the current Beenleigh line, and the Airport line linked up with the Ipswich line.

‘Sound’ railplan

Rail Back on Track spokesman Robert Dow, who received a briefing on the plan before it was published, said overall the new network would allow significantly more trains to run daily.

“We think [the plan] is the best structuring in terms of how the tunnel is configured with the track layouts north and south of the tunnel,” he told ABC Radio Brisbane.

“It will mean that people in some cases will have to change how they travel.”

The switch of the airport line onto the Ipswich spine will require travelers from the north to change at Eagle Junction or Roma Street to get to Brisbane Airport.

Southern travelers to the airport will also need to change at Roma Street.

A map of the Queensland train lines
The new rail network that will operate from 2025 when Cross River Rail comes online.(Supplied: Queensland Government)

Overall, Mr Dow said, the new network was sound, noting bus connections would also need to change to match the new system in 2025.

Gold Coast concerns

But Gold Coast Major Tom Tate questioned why the new network ended the direct line between his city and the Brisbane Airport.

“Something isn’t right when the two biggest cities in Queensland, with two major international airports, won’t have a direct air train service,” Mr Tate said.

“I accept that the services from the coast to Brisbane city will be faster but having to change for an airport connection is a huge disincentive.

“The whole intent of Cross River Rail is more services, faster services and greater reliability. That seems to not apply to the critical airport direct services.”

core promises

Transport Minister Mark Bailey said there was “a lot of logic” in the new network which made the most use of the new underground tunnels.

He said the new network would significantly improve access to The Gabba for sporting and cultural events while CBD workers would find it more convenient.

A design concept for a new CBD train station
A concept image of the Albert Street Cross River Rail station in the center of Brisbane.(Supplied: Queensland Government)

“A lot of people, for instance, get out at South Bank and South Brisbane at the moment and walk across the bridges because the current system is so circuitous,” he said.

“They’ll be able to go directly to Albert Street, get out and go to their place of work within a block or two. It’s going to be fantastic.”

On Tuesday, opposition transport spokesman Steve Minnikin grilled Mr Bailey on the total cost of Cross River Rail during parliamentary estimates, questioning the project’s $5.4 billion price tag.

Mr Minnikin said the “core” cost of Cross River Rail did not include millions for additional projects that were critical to the network’s future success, including $301 million for the Clapham Yard Stabling in Moorooka and $327 million for a new European train control system.

Mr Bailey said his advice was the project was “on budget” and his department was monitoring the impacts of rising inflation on construction materials.

Meanwhile, Brisbane City Council recently launched a review of its bus network ahead of the $1.7 billion Brisbane Metro coming online in late 2024.

The on-demand Metro buses will run regularly along the south-eastern busway and connect with Cross River Rail at Roma Street and Woolloongabba.

Plans for exactly how the Metro will integrate with those two rail stations are still to be determined.

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Categories
Australia

Gold Coast, Beenleigh rail users face major changes as Brisbane’s Cross River Rail network is revealed

Rail commuters in Queensland’s south-east face the most significant shake-up in decades after the state government outlined several route changes to integrate the $5.4 billion Cross River Rail network launch in 2025.

State Transport Minister Mark Bailey said the planned changes amounted to a “brand new network”.

“This network will be a change for Queenslanders, but it will open the door for future investment and time-saving timetable changes to help Queenslanders get home sooner and safer,” he said.

Under the plan, south-east Queensland trains will operate in three sections, all connecting at the existing or new underground Roma Street stations.

Existing rail lines will be shifted to reconnect at new or upgraded stations — significantly altering how residents on the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast access Brisbane.

A map of the Queensland train lines
A map for the new network that is expected to be operational from 2025.(Supplied: Queensland government)

Sector One will connect the Gold and Sunshine Coasts directly, operating trains from Varsity Lakes and Beenleigh through to Redcliffe Peninsula, Nambour and Gympie.

Sector Two will link the Rosewood and Springfield lines through Central to the domestic airport and Shorncliffe.

Sector Three will run Ferny Grove trains through Central and Southbank to Cleveland.

Suburban services to shift

The new rail plan will shift multiple suburban services, splitting the Ferny Grove line from the Beenleigh line, placing the airport spur along the Ipswich line, and extending the Doomben line from Roma Street to Indooroopilly.

In a major shift, commuters on the Beenleigh and Gold Coast lines will need to change at Boggo Road or Roma Street to access South Brisbane stations and Central station in the CBD.

The Gold Coast and Beenleigh lines will instead travel through the city via Albert Street, Woolloongabba and Boggo Road.

scaffolding and cranes fill a construction site
The underground station at Boggo Road is taking shape.(Supplied: Cross River Rail)

Another line will run between Boggo Road and the newly upgraded Exhibition station at Bowen Hills.

Travelers from Ipswich and Rosewood will also need to switch trains in the city to connect to northbound Sunshine Coast services.

future and legacy

The 10.2km underground Cross River Rail project will run from Dutton Park to Bowen Hills, with nearly 6 kilometers of tunnels cut under Brisbane River and new underground stations at Roma Street, Albert Street, Woolloongabba and Boggo Road.

“More than 80,000 people migrated to Queensland in the past two years, and this investment shows we are at full throttle, planning, building and delivering a world-class rail network for the state,” Mr Bailey said.

“The new network we build now will be the network Queensland kids and Olympic-goers will remember.”

Concept drawing for new Cross River Rail station
An artistic impression of the Cross River Rail design for Roma Street Station.(Supplied: Queensland government)

The planned network will be in place several years before the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games, and was kickstarted in 2019 by south-east Queensland mayors who called for better-connected rail and public transport infrastructure across the region.

Mr Bailey said the government’s rail investment also included a $6 million planning study for the Direct Sunshine Coast line, a $2.5 million corridor study for a line connecting the booming city of Springfield to Ipswich, and a $20 million Salisbury to Beaudesert business case.

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