Torrens Junction.
The intermidable saga of the Torrens
Junction grade separation project continues. Readers may remember,
whilst they wait for freight trains to clear level crossings in the
electorate, that the local member of parliament, Mr Atkinson told us
exactly a year ago:
“The Minister for Transport has told
me that the State Government has made a bid to the Commonwealth's
Infrastructure Australia Fund for matching money to build a
one-kilometre defile that will take the Outer Harbour and grange
passenger trains beneath the standard-gauge freight in the west
parklands and underneath Park Terrace. This would mean that the
locomotives of Melbourne-bound freight trains would no longer be
halted by signals just south of North Adelaide Railway Station and
therefore their trucks would no longer block the Hawker Street and
Torrens Road level crossings while they waited for suburban passenger
trains to cross the freight line. The Minister tells me the bid is
one of the few that fulfills all the requirements of Infrastructure
Australia and stands a good chance of being funded. This project
would also eliminate the level crossing at Park Terrace, making
traffic flow more easily there. This was a topic that arose out of
our last street-corner meetings in Bowden in March.”
Mr Atkinson's intervention with the
Commonwealth seems to have had little positive impact, since the local railway grade separation has been put on ice, while the other
half of the plan, the Goodwood Juction grade separation, has received
the entire Commonwealth money – over $400 million.
The last sighting of the Torrens
Junction proposal was here:
Residents may gain consolation by a careful consideration of Mr Atkinson's major traffic initiative, the 25 year
campaign to re-open Barton Terrace North Adelaide, which creeps its
way through the House of Assembly – much like the traffic piled up
in Hawker Street, waiting for the freight trains to move.
"why does the freight train stop at hawker st crossing?"
The freight trains run on their own standard gauge track, while Adelaide metropolitan passenger trains run on broad gauge.
The freight line crosses the passenger lines at Goodwood and Torrens Junctions. Because the freight trains must 'give way' to passenger trains, they have to slow down or stop before the crossover points, if a passenger train needs to pass safely through the junction.
Torrens junction lies immediately north of the railway bridge crossing the Torrens river, adjacent to Bowden. Freight trains can be up to 1.5 Kms long, which means that those freight trains which need to slow down or stop before Torrens junction (traveling south) will cause motorists delays at both Hawker street and Torrens road railway crossings.
The “grade separation” proposal for the two junctions has been planned for many years.
The original plan called for underpasses to be built and level crossing upgrades in the areas. The Howard Government in its dying days promised $200M for the two junctions.
The grade separation funding application was given high priority under the Rudd nation building scheme.
However, with the inauguration of the Bowden Urban Village Transport Orientated Development in 2008, a coterie of local government members, planning officials and property developers pushed for - not just the 'functional' grade separation at Torrens Junction - but an extension of the proposed underpass right through to the existing Bowden Station, to form one of the prominent features of the Urban Village TOD.
This elaboration, while effectively subsidizing the property developers in Bowden, had the unfortunate result of rendering the project less eligible for funding from the Commonwealth, and the the situation as it now stands is that level crossing delays at Hawker street and Torrens road will continue to infuriate us for another decade.
"why does the freight train stop at hawker st crossing?"
The freight trains run on their own standard gauge track, while Adelaide metropolitan passenger trains run on broad gauge.
The freight line crosses the passenger lines at Goodwood and Torrens Junctions. Because the freight trains must 'give way' to passenger trains, they have to slow down or stop before the crossover points, if a passenger train needs to pass safely through the junction.
Torrens junction lies immediately north of the railway bridge crossing the Torrens river, adjacent to Bowden. Freight trains can be up to 1.5 Kms long, which means that those freight trains which need to slow down or stop before Torrens junction (traveling south) will cause motorists delays at both Hawker street and Torrens road railway crossings.
The “grade separation” proposal for the two junctions has been planned for many years.
The original plan called for underpasses to be built and level crossing upgrades in the areas. The Howard Government in its dying days promised $200M for the two junctions.
The grade separation funding application was given high priority under the Rudd nation building scheme.
However, with the inauguration of the Bowden Urban Village Transport Orientated Development in 2008, a coterie of local government members, planning officials and property developers pushed for - not just the 'functional' grade separation at Torrens Junction - but an extension of the proposed underpass right through to the existing Bowden Station, to form one of the prominent features of the Urban Village TOD.
This elaboration, while effectively subsidizing the property developers in Bowden, had the unfortunate result of rendering the project less eligible for funding from the Commonwealth, and the the situation as it now stands is that level crossing delays at Hawker street and Torrens road will continue to infuriate us for another decade.
GRIEVANCE DEBATE
Wednesday 17 October 2012 HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY Page 3221
GOODWOOD AND TORRENS RAIL PROJECT
Ms
CHAPMAN (Bragg) (15:26): As the shadow minister for transport, I
take a great interest in transport and infrastructure projects in
this state: when they are good, I support them; when they are bad and
wasteful, of course I object to them; and when they do not tell us
the whole truth, I expose them. Today, I want to refer to the
Goodwood and Torrens rail junctions project, which is a $443 million
project, essentially to provide grade separation between domestic and
freight rail at two intersections, and other projects.
In
May this year, the federal government announced in its budget that
South Australia would receive $232 million in 2015-16, which is on a
fifty-fifty arrangement between the state and federal governments
towards the Goodwood and Torrens junctions project. In this year's
state budget, the South Australian government committed $110 million
this year for the Goodwood component, that is, the first grade
separation.
I
should also point out that $110 million is still missing from the
total value of the project. The government said straightaway, 'We are
going to start developing, repairing, and so forth, the Goodwood part
of the project; the rest, obviously is going to have to wait.' There
is still $110 million missing. This is very important. We received
the Auditor-General's Report yesterday and for the first time in the
time I have been here that I can recall (I may be wrong) the
transport department actually received a qualified approval from the
Auditor-General. The information there relates to how the government
has treated its federal money.
We
will obviously follow a number of these issues up at the appropriate
time, if and when we ever get questions in relation to the
Auditor-General's report, but in December 2011 Mr Rod Hook, the CEO,
provided the Budget and Finance Committee with the following
breakdown of costs in respect of this project: Goodwood Junction,
$104.6 million; Leader Street, $51.6 million; Keswick, $45.8 million;
Mike Turtur Bikeway overpass, $10.5 million; and Torrens Junction,
Bowden and Park Terrace, $230.6 million.
When
the Goodwood component went to the Public Works Committee recently,
which I attended, Mr Hook attended with his staff to give evidence
and, when asked about whether these figures were still applicable,
they appeared to be somewhat confused about the budget figures that
were presented, and they indicated that they would provide some
updated material in relation to that. To date, to the best of my
knowledge, that information has not been forthcoming, and I have
since had a meeting with one of the senior officers in relation to
this project and other matters.
What
was very telling at that meeting of the Public Works was, firstly,
that the submission that was presented by the Department of Transport
no longer includes the $10.5 million bike overpass (on Ride to Work
Day, it is rather a disappointing thing to have to be announcing
today), and it is of concern that that was missing. The state
government had not funded the Leader Street upgrade, which has
completely disappeared from the work to be undertaken at this stage.
Apparently, that is to be done at some later date with the Torrens
interchange. If anyone knows the geography of Adelaide, they will
know it is at the other end of the area concerned.
The
honourable member for Ashford, in fact, gave evidence. To her credit,
she described the traffic conditions in that area as 'a nightmare' in
respect of the importance of having the Leader Street upgrade done.
Given the increased traffic on the Seaford rail line after the
electrification and extension, it is critical that we fix the level
crossings that go with it.
It
is a concern to me that that has slipped off the net, but here is
another thing: we have lost the bike overpass, Leader Street has
disappeared and now we have the state government not funding a $45.8
million upgrade for the build of a station for the Keswick site. They
are only going to provide approximately $18 million for Keswick,
which is not even happening at the same time as the current Goodwood
project.
These
are all very concerning matters. We have got a $110 million shortfall
on a major project which is not in the budget anywhere from any
government, we have got queries raised in the Auditor-General's
Report and we have got public works material coming through which now
highlights multimillion dollar parts of the project which have
disappeared—just completely disappeared.
We
will be wanting some answers. We will look forward to the answers
that are provided by Mr Hook and/or his staff, in due course, to the
Public Works Committee and the ultimate report to the parliament on
these matters, but it is not acceptable that the government promote
and propose major projects or smaller ones, for that matter, and then
rip the guts out of them before they are actually out there for
public consideration. This is a matter we will be taking further.
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