Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Southland railway station

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Location
  
Bay Road, Cheltenham

Operated by
  
Metro

Tracks
  
2

Opened
  
2017 (scheduled)

Owned by
  
VicTrack

Line(s)
  
Frankston

Owner
  
VicTrack

Platforms in use
  
2

Southland railway station ATDB View topic Artist39s impression of new Southland Station

Distance
  
21.30 kilometres from Southern Cross

Similar
  
Cheltenham railway station - M, Westfield Southland, Highett railway station, Bentleigh railway station, McKinnon railway station

Southland railway station construction announcement


Southland railway station is a planned railway station on the Frankston line currently under construction in the Melbourne suburb of Cheltenham. It is scheduled to open in the second half of 2017.

Contents

Southland railway station Southland station now expected to open 2017 Daniel Bowen dot com

19th century

Southland railway station Call for railway station at Southland

The first proposal for a railway station between Highett and Cheltenham stations on the Frankston railway line at Bay Road, occurred in the early 1880s, during the completion of the Frankston Line. Plans progressed throughout the 1880s, until they discontinued in 1892, by the City of Moorabbin, which at the time had other issues demanding attention.

1960s

Southland railway station httpswwwptvvicgovauassetsPTVPTV20images

When Westfield Southland (then Southland Shopping Centre) opened in September 1968, discussions were raised on whether a railway station would be built on the Frankston line, adjacent to land then-occupied by the St John of God home for boys. Despite this, plans were not submitted.

1990s

The proposal arose again in 1990, by this stage, almost 110 years after the initial idea was established. This was in conjunction with the redevelopment of Westfield Southland shopping centre, which was expanded across the Nepean Highway to land adjacent to the Frankston railway line. The Public Transport Corporation wrote a letter to the City of Moorabbin, responding to suggestions that Cheltenham station be relocated; stating that the project would be infeasible. The Public Transport Users Association predicted that the redevelopment of Westfield Southland would create traffic congestion, unless a new railway station was built. Although plans had been discussed, the proposal was once again moot.

2000s

Southland railway station Southland Railway Station Construction Announcement YouTube

During the Victorian Election campaign in November 2002, the Labor State Government announced their intentions of implementing a feasibility study into the possibility of a station at Southland. The Cheltenham Chamber of Commerce expressed disapproval with these plans, fearing that the station would "kill" the nearby businesses on Charman Road (adjacent the Cheltenham railway station). Despite this, in 2004, the State Government commenced feasibility works. In 2009, the Victorian Employers' Chamber of Commerce and Industry listed a Southland railway station project as "urgent" and in need of a 2012–2014 completion, to support the population increase in Melbourne over the next 30 years, that would require established suburbs to have improved transport.

2010s

Almost 130 years since the original proposal, planning for the Southland railway station resurfaced in November 2010, during the Victorian state election. Both the government and opposition pledged to construct the railway station during the next term (2010–14).

In the 2011 budget, $700,000 was allocated for planning; however, no time-frame had been set for the planning of the railway station project. The Department of Transport hosted an online survey on the proposed station entitled "Southland Station Survey"; its benefits and where it will be situated. The City of Kingston and the City of Bayside, alongside the Westfield Group, announced their intention to co-operate together. As a result of the State Government's consultations with both councils, the Government moved onto designing the station with input from the local community in November 2011.

By 2012 the project appeared to be on-hold; however, a spokesperson for the State Government claimed that planning for the station was still underway, "which includes identifying the exact location of the station, station layout and access requirements, arrangements for connecting bus services and connections with local roads". According to The Age, the station would not be built during the Liberal government's first term (2010–14).

Nevertheless, the City of Bayside established a project control group in support of the station and aimed at influencing the development. The City of Kingston, the Department of Planning and Community Development, the Department of Transport, VicRoads and Places Victoria also joined Bayside in establishing the group.

Public Transport Victoria's (PTV) 20-year Network Development Plan released in March 2013 to accommodate Melbourne's transport needs, stated a railway station at Southland would be built within the next five years.

Funding for the station was allocated in the 2013/14 Victorian State Budget. In April 2014 the government announced construction would commence in 2015, with the station to open in 2016. By March 2015, plans for the project were renewed and released. Consultation with the community began in March and was completed by May 2015. Construction on the station commenced in August 2016; since, an underpass has been constructed joining the two platforms, with construction on the closest platform towards the shopping centre starting in February 2017. The station is expected to be open before Christmas 2017.

A key development in the Southland Principal Activity Centre, it's been predicted that the station will be used by 4,400 people daily. PTV purchased and developed land on the street adjacent to the railway line, 60 Tulip Grove, which may operate as a future access-point to the station in the future. The station will comprise:

Naming

Despite being referred to in public discourse as Southland Station since the 1990s redevelopment of the adjacent shopping centre, concerns had been raised about associating a public asset with a privately owned enterprise. Following discussions between stakeholders and the community, PTV confirmed in its February 2016 feedback summary report that the station would be named Southland.

References

Southland railway station Wikipedia