On Wednesday some rail announcements were made. Some level crossing removals would be fast-tracked and a new station would be built at Pakenham East. One of the projects mentioned concerned Surrey Hills and Mont Albert stations. Both, just 800 metres apart, would be replaced by one station in between. This would enable level crossing removals at Union Rd and Mont Albert Rd with the rail placed in a trench.
In a presentation on Wednesday evening Box Hill MP Paul Hamer said that the merging was necessary due to the local topography and bends in the rail line. While some existing stations are on bends this is not considered desirable for new stations due to varying gaps between the platform and the train. And some initially attractive design concepts might have unacceptably deep trenches and long climbs for station users due to the topography.
You can see the placement of the proposed station on the project map above.
While technically in the suburb of Mont Albert the new station will be nearer the existing Surrey Hills Station. That station, in one of Melbourne's most expensive suburbs, has historically been well looked after in terms of its staffing (it being a premium station), the number of peak trains it gets and it still being in Zone 1 (when that mattered for the cheaper fares). It is also local to nineties premier Jeff Kennett. Mont Albert is unstaffed, receives fewer trains but is still in Zone 1.
The local seat of Box Hill reliably returns Liberal MPs except when Labor polls exceptionally well like it did in 2018. However, like a clutch of eastern suburb seats, even a minor anti-government swing in 2022 will see it return to the Liberals. While there will be political sensitivities, the view from government appears to be that the popularity of level crossing removals should outweigh any backlash from what might be seen as the closure of a station.
Such boldness was not the case before 2018 when decisions were made to choose trench rather than the better, faster and cheaper elevated rail at certain Frankston line sites. 'Skyrail' on the Dandenong line hadn't been completed when the Frankston line projects were announced. And Labor could quite easily lose Box Hill yet still retain office whereas if they lose seats like Carrum, Mordialloc and Bentleigh then they will almost certainly lose power. The level crossings will be gone in 2023, with the area likely to be still a building site in the election lead-up.
Level crossings have affected how we plan buses. Due to long boom gate down times there has been a tendency for routes to avoid crossing the tracks to ensure reliability. You can see this in areas like St Albans, Essendon and Box Hill/Blackburn. Removed level crossings potentially end these barriers and routes can potentially operate straight through. However there has been few if any substantive bus network reforms arising from level crossing removals. Indeed in some cases bus connectivity has got worse with removals such as Mentone moving the station entrance further from buses.
Whatever the past sins at other sites, Surrey Hills/Mont Albert may have a good case for bus network reform despite their high income skew being less favourable for patronage than nearby Box Hill. There may also be a perceived need to 'give something back' in return for a station being deleted as well as the seat's slim electoral margins. Carrum's level crossing removal, that involved elevated rail, is an example of things being 'given back' to mitigate local concerns. Additions to the project included the new Karrum Karrum bridge extending Station St and a new beachside park. However the failure of Carrum Station to have entrances on both sides of McLeod Rd, the closure of Eel Race Rd's connection to the Nepean Hwy and the extension of McLeod Rd to Nepean Hwy with high traffic volumes has made walking conditions worse, not better.
Existing network
Surrey Hills is a long-established high income suburb. Bus route numbers have changed but fifty years ago the area had three routes fairly similar to what runs now. East-west transport connections are strong. These include the Ringwood train line, the 109 tram to the north, and, further north the 302/304 bus corridor. All run to the Melbourne CBD every 15 minutes or better on weekdays.
Canterbury Rd is the main exception. It's a busy traffic route but has no buses running more than a short distance along it. Useful Network Part 14 proposes a Box Hill - Canterbury Rd - Ringwood bus to connect major destinations. The portion of Canterbury Rd between Camberwell and Surrey Hills has a parallel train line with close stations so arguably does not need a bus. However the section between Surrey Hills and Box Hill is more distant (especially when the station relocates) so does need a bus. I'll say more on that later.
North-south access, such as would be required for circumferential travel and to feed trains and trams, is very poor. None of Surrey Hill's three bus routes operate 7 days. Operating hours are also limited and typical frequency when services do run is every 30 to 60 minutes.
The Useful Network map below shows the void in north-south service.
The train is the fastest way into the CBD for those near walking distance of it. Areas further north have slower trams and buses. However the absence of frequent north-south bus routes make the travel times for those hoping to take advantage of trains' faster speed volatile.
All buses in the area go to Box Hill, which makes sense given it's such a major destination. However some take an indirect path to get there (612) or they needlessly overlap the 109 tram (284). Meanwhile, as mentioned before, Canterbury Rd is conspicuously missing a service.
Conclusion
What are your thoughts on buses in Surrey Hills and Mont Albert? Does any option stand out or is there another that could be better still? Are there gains from casting the net wider, such as rerouting 302 or 903, providing stronger termini for the 284 and 766 or even a Deakin University connection from the north, such as by rerouting 284? Or should more have been said about boosting peak frequencies, and if so which corridors justify upgrades? Please leave any comments below.
PS: An index to all Useful Networks is here.
3 comments:
A quite difficult area to draw a bus route map for.
Another potential change to the bus network in the area could be run the 903 via the new station, instead of the wattle park tram terminus.
P.S. Box Hill was a marginal seat until the 1991 redistribution brought in a lot of mostly Liberal voters (and their MLA) from the abolished Balwyn at the 1992 election. The 2 subsequent redistributions have moved many of those voters into Kew and another redistribution has just commenced and will do the same, making the seat more marginal.
I think I like option A the best. However, would it be possible to swap the 284 and 766 routes east of Union Rd so that service on Union Rd is maintained, even if at the expense of directness?
The problem with bus route running through Mont Albert and Surrey Hills is the lack of passengers that use them. There have been moved to decrease the number of bus stops along the 766 bus route through the area. It may be the fact that people in the area don't want to use public buses as it is not seen as being up to their standard. This is what I have been told by bus drivers and staff.
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