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Metro North West Line
The Metro North West Line is a future metro rail line serving the north west suburbs in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The line is the first line of the Sydney Metro network and is coloured teal on maps and informational material. The line is in the final stages of testing. It is Australia's first metro line.
History
- F1 Manly
- F2 Taronga Zoo
- F3 Parramatta River
- F4 Cross Harbour
- F5 Neutral Bay
- F6 Mosman Bay
- F7 Double Bay
- F8 Cockatoo Island
A railway line serving the car-dependant north west suburbs had been proposed for many years. The North West Rail Link was announced in the New South Wales Government's 1998 long-term transport plan Action for Transport 2010. Plans to construct the line were repeatedly announced but then cancelled. While most plans envisaged the line as a conventional railway using Sydney's standard double-deck trains, the line was eventually created as single-deck metro line. The project to construct the line, known as Sydney Metro Northwest, converted the Epping to Chatswood railway line to metro standards and extended it through the north west suburbs to Rouse Hill.
The eastern terminus of the line is at Chatswood. This means passengers travelling to the city are required to change to a T1 North Shore & Western Line or T9 Northern Line service to complete their journey. Sydney Metro City & Southwest is a project to construct a new tunnel to extend the metro line under Sydney Harbour, through the city and on to Sydenham. From there the metro will head west to Bankstown, taking over most of the Bankstown railway line. This extension is under construction and is due to open in 2024.
Hurstville branch
Early plans for the City & Southwest project envisaged a second phase of the southern sector conversion of existing railway lines. This would see two of the four Illawarra railway line tracks between Sydenham and Hurstville converted to rapid transit and added to the Sydney Metro network. This would increase rail capacity between Hurstville and the city by 10 trains per hour. Though a precise construction timeframe was not provided, the plan was for all work being completed by 2031. The Hurstville conversion would add eight stations and 9km to the metro network.[1] Developing plans for this extension proved difficult, and the Sydney Morning Herald reported in February 2016 that the project may have been dropped.[2] It was absent from the New South Wales Government's 2018 Greater Sydney Services and Infrastructure Plan which set out potential transport projects to be built through to 2056.
Stations
Name | Opened** | Interchanges* |
---|---|---|
Tallawong | May 2019 | none |
Rouse Hill | May 2019 | |
Kellyville | May 2019 | |
Bella Vista | May 2019 | |
Norwest | May 2019 | |
Hills Showground | May 2019 | |
Castle Hill | May 2019 | |
Cherrybrook | May 2019 | |
Epping | May 2019 |
|
Macquarie University | May 2019 | none |
Macquarie Park | May 2019 | |
North Ryde | May 2019 | |
Chatswood | May 2019 | |
City and Southwest extension | ||
Crows Nest | 2024 | none |
Victoria Cross | 2024 | |
Barangaroo | 2024 | |
Martin Place | 2024 | |
Pitt Street | 2024 | none |
Central | 2024 |
|
Waterloo | 2024 | none |
Sydenham | 2024 | |
Marrickville | 2024 | none |
Dulwich Hill | 2024 | |
Hurlstone Park | 2024 | none |
Canterbury | 2024 | |
Campsie | 2024 | |
Belmore | 2024 | |
Lakemba | 2024 | |
Wiley Park | 2024 | |
Punchbowl | 2024 | |
Bankstown | 2024 |
** As a metro station. * Most stations are served by connecting bus services. Some Sydney Trains stations may also be served by intercity trains at certain times.
Capacity
Stage 1 is due to operate with 6-car trains running on 4 minute headways. After the addition of the Stage 2 extension to Bankstown the system will require at least 59 six-car trains to run every four minutes during peak periods. However the stations’ platforms will be configured to allow for future use of 8-car trains and the signalling system designed to allow for 2 minute headways, both of which are planned to be introduced once sufficient patronage demands it. Eight-car trains have a design capacity of 1,539 passengers, and increasing the running frequency to ultimately 30 trains per hour (2 minute headway) would provide a maximum capacity of 46,170 passengers per hour per direction.[3]
Potential extension
During the 2019 New South Wales election campaign, the government announced it would commence planning of a western extension to the line from Bankstown to Liverpool.[4]
References
- ↑ Transport for NSW (June 2012). Sydney's rail future: modernising Sydney's trains. http://www.transport.nsw.gov.au/sites/default/files/b2b/publications/sydneys-rail-future.pdf.
- ↑ O'Sullivan, Matt; Saulwick, Jacob (3 February 2016). "Plan to extend Sydney metro line south hits growing list of hurdles". The Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/plan-to-extend-sydney-metro-line-south-hits-growing-list-of-hurdles-20160201-gmj9dz.html.
- ↑ "SYDNEY METRO CITY & SOUTHWEST | BUSINESS CASE SUMMARY". Transport for NSW. http://www.sydneymetro.info/sites/default/files/Sydney%20Metro%20CSW%20Business%20Case%20Summary.pdf. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ↑ "Expanding metro network to connect Sydney like never before". 14 March 2019. https://nsw.liberal.org.au/candidates/gladys-berejiklian/news/articles/EXPANDING-METRO-NETWORK-TO-CONNECT-SYDNEY.