Elizabeth Quay bus station explained

Elizabeth Quay bus station should not be confused with Perth Busport.

Elizabeth Quay bus station
Style:Transperth
Address:Mounts Bay Road, Perth
Borough:Western Australia
Country:Australia
Coordinates:-31.9562°N 115.8547°W
Bus Routes:41
Bus Stands:35
Opened:30 November 1991
Owned:Public Transport Authority
Operator:Transperth
Connections:Train transfer at Elizabeth Quay
Zone:1 /
Former:City Busport (1991–2004)
Esplanade Busport (2004–2016)

Elizabeth Quay bus station, formerly the Esplanade Busport, is a Transperth bus station, located at the southern edge of the Perth CBD in Western Australia, next to the Perth Convention Exhibition Centre and Elizabeth Quay railway station. It has 35 stands and is served by 55 Transperth routes operated by Path Transit, Swan Transit and Transdev WA. It is also served by South West Coach Lines services.

Description

Elizabeth Quay bus station is located west of Elizabeth Quay railway station, adjacent to Mounts Bay Road, the Perth Convention Exhibition Centre, and the Ernst & Young Building. There are bus access points to the north-west (Mounts Bay Road and Mills Street), north (Mounts Bay Road westbound, entry only), and south-east (Kwinana Freeway ramps and William Street). The passenger entrances are at the north and south ends of the upper level concourse, and there are multiple pedestrian bridges connecting the bus station to the buildings north of Mounts Bay Road. The concourse sits above five ground-level platforms, which are labelled A to E. Each platform has seven stands, identified by the platform letter and a digit (1 to 7). Buses servicing the northernmost Platform A run west to east along the platform (stand A1 to stand A7), while buses for the other platforms travel from east to west (stands 7 to 1 for each platform).[1]

History

Elizabeth Quay bus station was opened as City Busport on 30 November 1991 by Premier Carmen Lawrence.[2] It was renamed Esplanade Busport in September 2004.[3] On 31 January 2016, Esplanade Busport and Esplanade railway station were renamed to Elizabeth Quay bus station and Elizabeth Quay railway station. The renaming was controversial; the estimated cost was $700,000, at a time when the state government was running a significant budget deficit.[4]

Bus routes

Many bus services start and terminate at the Elizabeth Quay Bus Station:

Platform E (St George Tce Service Bound)

Accidents and incidents

On 15 July 2015, a gas-fuelled Mercedes-Benz OC 500 LE caught fire whilst stationary in the 4th lane (more commonly known as lane D). During the fire, the building above the Busport was evacuated as a safety precaution. No-one was injured and it was said that the fire was caused by a coolant leak. The bus cost an estimated $750,000 and was completely destroyed in the fire.[5] [6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Elizabeth Quay Bus Station – Access Map . Transperth. 30 September 2016 . 2 . 7 August 2016.
  2. Web site: Perth City Busport buildings and walkways [picture] ]. State Library of Western Australia . 11 January 2023.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20040925013757/http://www.transperth.wa.gov.au/DesktopDefault.aspx NewsDesk
  4. News: Kagi. Jacob. WA Government attacked for costly renaming of Elizabeth Quay bus and train station. 30 January 2016. ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 16 December 2015.
  5. Web site: Brendan . Foster . Esplanade Busport evacuated after bus catches fire . . 15 July 2015 . 29 January 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304142135/http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/esplanade-busport-evacuated-after-bus-catches-fire-20150714-gic44o.html . 4 March 2016 . live .
  6. News: Perth bus safety checks ended two weeks before Esplanade busport blaze . . 19 July 2015 . 29 January 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220622130827/http://www.perthnow.com.au/news/western-australia/perth-bus-safety-checks-ended-two-weeks-before-esplanade-busport-blaze/news-story/29181039147c1d74adf08c526234ca46?nk=8bad1a12880f307b6c1f85657ded7d49-1454059254 . 22 June 2022 . live .