Southern Cross railway station explained

Southern Cross
Type:Inter-city, regional and commuter rail station
Style:Melbourne
Address:Spencer Street, Melbourne, Victoria
Country:Australia
Line:Metropolitan:
    Regional and inter-city:
    Connections:
    • Bus
    • Tram
    • Coach
    • SkyBus
    Structure:Ground level with mezzanine
    Platform:16
    Tracks:22
    Bicycle:12
    Rebuilt:1960s and 2000s
    Electrified:Platforms 8 to 14 only
    Accessible:Yes—step free access
    Code:SSS
    Owned:IFM Investors
    Operator:Civic Nexus
    Zone:Myki Zone 1
    Status:Premium station
    Former:Spencer Street
    Pass Rank:2
    Other Services Header:Metropolitan services
    Other Services Collapsible:yes
    Other Services2 Header:Regional services
    Other Services2 Collapsible:yes
    Services Collapsible:yes
    Website:Southern Cross Station Pty LtdPublic Transport Victoria
    Embedded:
    Embed:yes
    Relief:1
    Mapframe-Zoom:14
    Status:Complete
    Building Type:Railway station terminus
    Cost:$700m
    Architect:Nicholas Grimshaw
    Architecture Firm:Grimshaw Architects
    Jackson Architecture
    Developer:Civic Nexus consortium
    Engineer:WSP Global
    Awards:Royal Institute of British Architects' Lubetkin Prize – most outstanding building outside the European Union

    Southern Cross railway station (until 2005 known as Spencer Street station) is a major railway station in Docklands, Melbourne. It is on Spencer Street, between Collins and La Trobe streets, at the western edge of the Melbourne central business district. The Docklands Stadium sports arena is 500m (1,600feet) north-west of the station.

    The station is owned, operated and maintained by Civic Nexus, a subsidiary of IFM Investors and operating as Southern Cross Station Pty Ltd,[1] under a 30-year lease to 2036 from the Victorian State Government, as part of a public-private partnership.[2] Southern Cross Station contracts Infranexus for management services. Infranexus is also wholly owned by IFM.[3]

    The station is the terminus of the state's regional railway network operated by V/Line, The Overland rail service to Adelaide, and NSW TrainLink XPT services to Sydney. It is also served by metropolitan rail services operated by Metro Trains, and connects with Flinders Street station and the underground City Loop. It is the second busiest railway station in Melbourne's metropolitan network, with 19.5 million metropolitan passenger movements recorded in 2018/19.[4] In 2018/19 the station also recorded an additional 6.3 million regional passengers through the V/Line network.[5]

    Southern Cross also has a coach terminal underneath the Spencer Outlet shopping complex. SkyBus services to Melbourne Airport and since 2017 to Avalon Airport[6] operate from there, as well as Firefly Express and Greyhound Australia interstate coach services and V/Line coach services to Mildura, Yarram, Mansfield, and other parts of Victoria not served by rail.

    History

    Opened as Spencer Street station in 1859,[7] five years after the other major Melbourne rail terminus at Flinders Street, the station was a dead-end terminus, running parallel to Spencer Street,[8] [9] composed of a single main platform with a dock platform at the north end.[10] It was not until 1874 that an extra platform was provided.[10]

    The two major city stations were not linked until 1879, when a single-track ground-level line was opened. It operated only at night, and only for freight trains. In the 1880s, it was proposed that Spencer Street station be removed in order to facilitate the westward expansion of the city, but the plan was subsequently rejected.

    1880s: Passenger services commence

    The 1880s saw the first of several grand but unrealised plans for the station. The first accepted design, drafted by Albert Charles Cook in 1883, was a fanciful Palladian palazzo design of two and three storeys, with a central portico.[11]

    From 1888 to 1894, the layout of the platforms was altered, with new country platforms being built on an angle to Spencer Street itself. The current coach terminal location was the site of a number of new platforms built for suburban services.[8]

    In 1891, further plans were made for a significant new station complex, including three-storey office complex and dominant clock tower, reminiscent of the later Sydney Central station,[12] but the 1890s depression put an end to such expensive schemes.

    In 1888, work started on the double track Flinders Street Viaduct linking the station to Flinders Street station. The line was initially only used by freight trains, with passenger train operations commencing in 1894.[13] It was at that time that the first through platform was provided at the station, used by suburban trains from Essendon and Williamstown.[10] The viaduct to Flinders Street was expanded to four tracks in 1915 and, following the electrification of the suburban lines through the station, today's platforms 11 to 14 were opened in 1924, along with a pedestrian subway providing access to them.[14] [10]

    In 1938, it was announced that construction of an improved station entrance and new car park had been approved, designed by architects Messrs Stephenson and Meldrum, costing £2,000.[15] Once again however, no construction took place.

    1960s: Modernisation

    In 1960, work started on a new Spencer Street station, as part of the construction of a new interstate standard gauge line to Sydney, New South Wales.[10] A station building was constructed which largely replaced the 1880s iron sheds, and a new 413m (1,355feet) platform number 1 was built. The passenger subway which had been constructed as part of the 1918 works was extended to include access to country platforms.[10] In connection with the construction of the underground loop, platforms 9 and 10 were rebuilt as part of the suburban section of the station, and a new double-track viaduct was constructed between Spencer Street and Flinders Street station, alongside the original one, bringing to six the number of tracks connecting the two stations. At the same time, the four older tracks were resignalled for bi-directional operation.

    In 1962, a separate subway network was constructed to carry mail between the station and what was then the Melbourne General Post Office and main postal sorting office, situated on the other side of Spencer Street.[16]

    The mechanically interlocked signal box at the station opened in 1887,[17] and was decommissioned in June 2008. Originally built with 120 levers, it had 191 when it closed, making it the world's largest.[18]

    Artist Harold Freedman's 36.6m (120.1feet) long and 7.32m (24.02feet) high History of Transport mural featured above the main concourse of the Spencer Street station and was unveiled by the premier of Victoria on 30 January 1978. During radical redevelopment (2002–2006) Freedman's mural was removed, but due to bargaining by the CFMEU, it remains on display above shop-fronts in the adjacent retail centre, DFO.[19]

    2000s: Redevelopment

    Southern Cross was redeveloped by the Civic Nexus consortium, following an innovative design by Grimshaw Architects and Jackson Architecture which features an undulating roof.[20] Construction began in October 2002 and was completed in late 2006, with the majority of the transport facilities finished in time for the 2006 Commonwealth Games. The central features of the design include a wave-shaped roof, a new entrance and concourse on Collins Street, a new coach interchange, a new food court, a bar/restaurant, separate retail outlets inside the station and a separate shopping complex between Bourke and La Trobe streets.

    This new shopping complex originally comprised a Direct Factory Outlet centre, a Virgin Megastore, along with food courts. This opened on 30 November 2006, although not all tenancies were occupied, and stage 2 was opened in March 2007. In 2009 the DFO relocated to a new site at South Wharf, the shopping centre being refitted by owner Austexx and rebranded simply as "Spencer Street fashion station".[21] In 2013 the shopping complex was rebranded as "Spencer Outlet Centre".

    In addition to the physical modifications, the station was renamed from Spencer Street to Southern Cross on 13 December 2005.[22]

    By July 2004, the project had fallen behind schedule and over budget by $200 million.[23] This was covered extensively in the media. As a result of over-runs and design issues, some elements of the original design, including an additional proposed footbridge connecting Lonsdale Street with Docklands Stadium, were scrapped.[24]

    Complaints about access to platforms, empty trains occupying space during the day and lack of government support were raised by Leighton Contractors, the construction firm overseeing the project. This led to concerns that the station might not be ready in time for the Commonwealth Games, and the government arranged with the railway operators to provide more access to the work site.

    The station's redevelopment is part of the wider Melbourne Docklands development. The architect responsible for the design is Nicholas Grimshaw. The structural engineering design was performed by WSP Global. The station has been awarded the Royal Institute of British Architects' Lubetkin Prize for most outstanding building outside the European Union.[25] The other buildings nominated were the Des Moines Public Library and the Hearst Tower, New York City.[26]

    The redevelopment has meant that passengers take more time to get to the suburban network platforms than before. The pedestrian subway access was removed in favour of street level and elevated concourses. The subway also continued underneath Spencer Street, and its closure means it is necessary for all pedestrians to wait for traffic lights to cross Spencer Street at street level. For all suburban and some country services, passengers using the main entrance on the corner of Collins and Spencer Streets have to ascend two escalators to a shopping concourse and then enter the paid area of the station, before descending again to the metropolitan platforms. There have been some accidents in which people have fallen from this elevated level.[27] [28] The 8m (26feet) ascent and descent is more than necessary to clear the height of trains, and more than the 3m (10feet) descent and ascent of the previous subway.

    Local architects have cited some of the Southern Cross station's shortcomings: the building's poor connection to the surrounding streets; its awkward juncture at the pedestrian bridge that links Spencer Street to Docklands Stadium; and the baffling manner in which the grand architectural gesture of Southern Cross Station tapers off into an uninspired homage to the boxy 1980s shopping mall—Spencer Outlet Centre.[29]

    2010s: Additional platforms

    As part of the Regional Rail Link project an extra two platforms (15/16) were constructed and opened in December 2013. These are divided into 15a, 15b, 16a and 16b. They are often used for Gippsland Services, and the lines that use the RRL tracks to Sunshine (Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo lines). These platforms allow trains to avoid the North Melbourne Flyover, which is an inconvenience for trains as it has a maximum speed of, and has shown to cause abnormal wheel wear on the VLocity fleet, as confirmed by an independent report commissioned by V/Line in 2016 to find out the cause of the problem, which ultimately led to up to a month of cancellations of services.

    Water Tower Clock

    In May 2014, the historic Water Tower Clock was installed in the concourse of the station.[30] The clock had originally been erected in 1882 at Flinders Street station, opposite the end of Elizabeth Street, atop a lattice tower about 60feet high. In 1902 the clock was moved to Princes Bridge station, and in 1910 it was relocated again, to Spencer Street station, where it remained until it was removed as part of the station's redevelopment in the mid-1960s. The clock mechanism was given to Museum Victoria, but the characteristic turret that housed the clock was sold to a scrap metal merchant. It was later rescued by private collectors, and the clock was returned to public ownership, being put on display in 1999 at the Scienceworks Museum, Spotswood. The clock was extensively restored before its return to Southern Cross, but the original mechanism remains in the collection of Museum Victoria.[31] [32]

    Platforms and services

    Platforms are numbered from east to west.

    Concourses

    Concourses are provided at Bourke and Collins Streets. Platform 1 is north of Bourke Street, while Platform 8 South is south of Collins Street. The remainder of platforms are located between Bourke and Collins Streets, with access from both concourses, with regional services from platforms 1–8 and 15–16, and suburban services from platforms 9–14 (platform 8 can also accommodate suburban services if necessary).

    Platforms

    Platforms 2 to 7, as well as platforms 15 and 16 are numbered as two sections: section A from the Collins Street concourse to the Bourke Street Footbridge, and section B beyond the Bourke Street Footbridge. These sections were previously known as the "Central" (2C to 8C) and "North" (2N to 8N) platforms, respectively. Platform 8 has these two sections and also a "South" section (8S) underneath Collins Street used commonly for Seymour services.

    Platforms 1 and 2 are fitted with dual gauge track, permitting both standard gauge interstate trains and V/Line broad gauge trains. The remainder of the platforms are solely broad gauge. A motorail dock is located at the northern end of the platform, with standard gauge access only.

    Standard gauge

    Platforms 1 & 2:

    Broad gauge

    Platforms 1–7:

    Platform 8:

    Broad gauge V/Line services departing Platforms 1–7 also depart from Platform 8

    Platform 9:
    Destinations via City Loop – Clifton Hill Group:

    Platform 10:
    Destinations via City Loop – Burnley Group:

    Platform 11:
    Destinations via North Melbourne – Northern Group:

    Platform 12:
    Destinations via Flinders Street – Caulfield Group:

    Platform 13:
    Destinations via Flinders Street:

    Platform 14:
    Destinations via North Melbourne:

    Platforms 15 & 16:

    Broad gauge V/Line services departing Platforms 1–8 also depart from Platforms 15 & 16.

    Transport links

    Metropolitan

    Kinetic Melbourne operate three bus routes via Southern Cross station:

    Queen Victoria MarketAltona North

    Queen Victoria Market – Fishermans Bend

    Queen Victoria Market – Fishermans Bend

    Yarra Trams operate nine services via Southern Cross station:

    From Collins Street:

    West PrestonVictoria Harbour[33]

    Balwyn NorthVictoria Harbour[34]

    Box HillPort Melbourne[35]

    Victoria GardensSt Kilda[36]

    From Harbour Esplanade:

    City Circle[37]

    DocklandsWattle Park[38]

    Docklands StadiumVermont South[39]

    From Bourke Street:

    RMIT Bundoora campus – Waterfront City Docklands[40]

    East BrunswickSt Kilda Beach[41]

    Regional

    The following coach services are operated to and from Southern Cross station by private companies on behalf of V/Line:[42]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Southern Cross Station . Southern Cross Station Pty Ltd . 17 June 2021.
    2. Web site: Southern Cross Station . IFM Investors . 17 June 2021.
    3. Web site: About Southern Cross Station . Southern Cross Station . 17 June 2021 . 8.
    4. Web site: Victorian Department of Transport . Data Vic . 2022 . Annual metropolitan train station patronage (station entries) .
    5. Web site: Victorian Department of Transport . Data Vic . 2022 . Annual regional train station patronage (station entries) .
    6. http://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/news/geelongavalon-airport-shuttle-bus-service-replaced-by-skybus/news-story/d5477874f9813ae9ba7661eff870280f Geelong-Avalon Airport shuttle bus service replaced by SkyBus
    7. http://vicsig.net/infrastructure/location/Southern-Cross Infrastructure – Southern Cross
    8. Vance Findlay. August 2003. More on Batman's Hill Station. Newsrail. 238–240.
    9. News: MELBOURNE AND WILLIAMSTOWN RAILWAY. . . 3,924 . Victoria, Australia . 8 January 1859 . 2 March 2017 . 5 . National Library of Australia.
    10. Sid Brown. November 2002. Batman's Hill to Southern Cross – via Spencer Street. Newsrail. 335–347.
    11. http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/253560 Accepted Designs for the New Railway Stations, Melbourne.
    12. http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/252286 Official Design for New Station at Spencer Street
    13. http://www.doi.vic.gov.au/DOI/Internet/transport.nsf/AllDocs/77A7B7BF57E705CDCA257234000CF29D?OpenDocument Department of Infrastructure: Early history of Southern Cross Station
    14. Web site: Spencer Street Station . School of Historical & Philosophical Studies, University of Melbourne . 2024-01-10.
    15. News: Spencer Street Improved Station £2,000 Plan Adopted . 31 May 2013 . The Argus . 5 February 1938 . Trove.
    16. Web site: Spencer Street Subway. Walking Melbourne. 9 November 2012.
    17. News: Signal box concerns . Herald Sun . News . 7 June 2008 . Mike . Edmonds . 20 July 2007.
    18. "The World's Largest Signalbox" The Railway Magazine issue 1341 January 2013 page 33
    19. Perin. Victoria. 6 May 2017. Harold Freedman: Artist for the People. Memo Review. en. 2017. 18.
    20. http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/The-roof-transporting-us-to-tomorrow/2005/03/24/1111525284371.html The roof transporting us to tomorrow
    21. Web site: DFO South Wharf, Melbourne to Open October 15. Marc Pallisco. 3 October 2009. realestatesource.com.au. 10 May 2010.
    22. http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/times-up-at-last-for-railway-landmark/2005/12/13/1134236064367.html Time's up at last for railway landmark
    23. http://www.audit.vic.gov.au/reports_finance/06afrcv.html Auditor-General’s Report on the Annual Financial Report of the State of Victoria, 2005–06
    24. http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2005/07/08/1120704557967.html All change at Spencer St
    25. Web site: Southern Cross Station in Melbourne Wins Prestigious International Architecture Award. 22 June 2007. 23 December 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110608160920/http://www.architecture.com/NewsAndPress/News/AwardsNews/Press/2007/SouthernCrossStation.aspx. 8 June 2011.
    26. Web site: Revamped Melbourne station wins international award . ABC News Online. 23 June 2007. 23 June 2007.
    27. News: Man critical after horror fall from escalator at Southern Cross. 14 July 2010. 12 April 2011. Melbourne. The Age.
    28. News: Woman badly hurt in station fall. 25 June 2010. 12 April 2011. Melbourne. The Age.
    29. News: Station's curves prove real head-turner . Melbourne . The Age . 14 July 2007.
    30. News: Melbourne's 130-year-old Water Tower Clock back at Southern Cross station. 2 March 2015. Melbourne Leader. 15 May 2014.
    31. Web site: Old clock's time to shine. Museum Victoria. 2 March 2015.
    32. "Water Tower clock installed at Southern Cross Station" Railway Digest July 2014 page 23
    33. tram.
    34. tram.
    35. tram.
    36. tram.
    37. tram.
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    39. tram.
    40. tram.
    41. tram.
    42. Web site: Timetable list. V/Line – Regional public transport for Victoria. 18 March 2018.