This article is about the New MetroRail organisation in Western Australia. For other uses, see Metrorail (disambiguation).
Former division of the PTA in Perth, Western Australia
New MetroRail was a division of the Public Transport Authority in Western Australia. It was responsible for managing extensions to Perth's railway network. The project doubled Perth's rail network, which is operated by Transperth, and was completed in 2007, after various projects were completed. Costing $1.6 billion, the project was the largest public transport project ever undertaken by the Western Australian government and effectively doubled the size of Perth's railway network. A similar agency Metronet was created in 2017 for future Perth rail extensions.
History
In December 1994, the Metropolitan Region Scheme was amended to include the original route for the Mandurah Railway, via Kenwick, using the existing Woodbridge to Kwinana freight line, and the Armadale line. In July 1995, the CourtLiberal government announced it would build the new line to Mandurah (via Kenwick), and committed to completing the line from Kenwick to Jandakot by 2005.
In April 1997, the same government approved funding for the South West Metropolitan Railway Master Plan. The Master Plan was completed in April 2000. In June of the same year, the plan for the Currambine to Butler extension was released, which formed part of the Northern Suburbs Railway Interim Master Plan.[1]
In February 2001, the GallopLabor government was elected. In August 2002, that government announced that the rail alignment from Jandakot to Perth would run in the median of the Kwinana Freeway, and not via Kenwick as previously planned. In December 2007, the Mandurah railway line opened, meaning that the project was complete.
The Perth Urban Rail Development Project was renamed in March 2003 to New MetroRail. The organisation had an information centre in the Perth central business district for the public to obtain information on New MetroRail projects.[2][3][4]
Works on the northern suburbs line within the project included:[5]
Acquisition of relevant lands, funded from the 2000/2001 state budget
The construction of a new Currambine station to a location within the middle of the Mitchell Freeway road reserve, along with associated approach works
Demolition of the previous Currambine station, including associated sidings and rolling stock cleaning facilities
Construction of the rail reserve and 4 km of railway track from Burns Beach Road to Nowgerup, along with associated necessary works including communications and signalling
Upgrade of existing station platforms along the line to a length of 144 m to accommodate 6-carriage rolling stock[6]
The purchase and delivery of new railcars at a cost of A$23 million (2000)
^Higham, Geoffrey (2007). Marble Bar to Mandurah : a history of passenger rail services in Western Australia. Rail Heritage WA. ISBN9780980392203.
^Western Australia. New MetroRail; Western Australia. Public Transport Authority (2004), NewMetroRail, Public Transport Authority, retrieved 11 June 2023