Quote:
Originally Posted by tayser
You picked a line that is most definitely not the best. Pakenham/Cranbourne (via Dandenong) or Lilydale/Belgrave (via Ringwood) are the best for frequency at the moment.
And overall, yes, Melbourne's train system is low frequency.. at least until next year when MM1 opens and capacity is created through the re-organisation of lines that will create.
Throw in about $15billion (out of $20bil budgeted) of level crossing removals - in 12 years 82 have been removed, we have a list of 115 that are in that budget and there's another 50 beyond that - on top of the Metro tunnel investment and 2+ years of massive driver training programmes we could be moving to something like 10 minute all day every frequencies on all the radial lines (14 in total including branches, 10 if you exclude the branches).
Nothing is (annoyingly) confirmed, but watch this space, lots of things start aligning in 2025.
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The lines you mentioned currently run at about 6 TPH on weekends on the combined section, which is worse than the (admittedly much degraded) Toronto Subway or Montréal Métro. 12 TPH combined would be above what we run on the off-peak though.
We have our own suburban rail program in the form of
GO Expansion, which will give us a properly layered metro and regional rail network when it's complete. Any decade now ...
Melbourne AFAIK has the Metro Tunnel and the Suburban Rail Link, but
$100 billion for the latter's construction is totally crazy, that's probably as much as all the transit under construction in Canada combined.
Here's to future transit improvements everywhere.