Brisbanites
will have access to an innovative double decker public transport tunnel which
will accommodate both rail and busway services under the new “UBAT”
(underground busway and train) tunnel. The project is budgeted at $5 billion, around $3 billion
less than the previous Cross
River Rail proposal.
Premier Campbell Newman
announced the Underground Bus and Train project, a 5.4 kilometre tunnel with
two train lines in the lower section and two busway lanes in the upper section.
“We’ve taken two of
Brisbane’s major congestion challenges – the Merivale train bridge and the
Cultural Centre bus precinct – and come up with an affordable and elegant
solution.
“The project we are
announcing today delivers the public transport services needed for the next 50
years.
“A single 15-metre-wide
tunnel will be built, requiring the largest borer ever used in Australia –
almost two metres wider than the Clem7 and Airport Link tunnels.”
Mr Newman said a public
competition would be held early in the New Year to come up with a name for the
project.
Lobby group Rail Back on Track
described the UBAT plan as exciting and welcome news, but spokesperson Robert
Dow said it must be constructed with future capacity demands in mind.
“For example, new rail
stations should be constructed in a space to allow nine car trains, and the bus
tunnel segment must be of such size to allow rail or light rail modifications
down the track,” Mr Dow said.
“Future proofing is
essential, there will be only one chance to get it right.”
National industry group The
Tourism and Transport Forum said the UBAT would be a world first that would
future proof Brisbane’s public transport system.
The tunnel would go underground at Dutton Park in the south to
Victoria Park in the north. There will be new stations at Woolloongabba, one
under the new entertainment and casino precinct on George Street,
servicing QUT and another station under Roma St.
“This will be a major
economic boost, creating hundreds of jobs and new pathways for business to grow
and develop in Brisbane,” Mr Nicholls said.
“This is a once-in-a-generation
opportunity to transform Brisbane into a world city with a public transport
system to match,” Mr Emerson said.
“This city has had two groups
of engineers working on two solutions for two major issues.
“The Newman Government and
the Brisbane City Council have got our heads together and come up with a
solution.”
Lord Mayor Graham Quirk said
cooperation between the State and Council led to an innovative solution that
advanced multiple transportation deficiencies.
“When completed, the project
will result in significant travel time savings across the suburbs.
“The CBD and adjacent suburbs
will need to accommodate an additional 130,000 workers in the next 20 years and
we need to improve public transport capacity to accommodate this growth by
improving the network.
The project will now pass to
the Coordinator-General to assess the environmental impacts. Resumptions will
include Dutton Park train station, however only minor impacts on other
properties are expected.
There were 108 residents and
businesses affected by the former Cross River Rail project – including 82
properties in the Yeerongpilly area – that will no longer be resumed.
Early works are expected to
start in 2015 and be completed by 2021. Further information will be available
at www.tmr.qld.gov.au/ubat
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