Generation-defining Metro Tunnel to carry passengers through summer of free PT, and beyond

December 24, 2025 BY
Metro Tunnel Melbourne

Minister for Transport Infrastructure Gabrielle Williams said to be able to build something of this scale under the CBD and still ensure that above ground the city was still able to move is quite an engineering feat. Photos: ADAM CARSWELL

TAKING a break in Melbourne this summer?

The Metro Tunnel is in motion after a decade of works that saw the removal of 1.8 million cubic metres of rock and soil from beneath the CBD and 754,000 cubic metres of concrete poured, supported by a skeleton of 157,000 tonnes of steel.

Passengers disembarking at State Library Station can exit via Swanston Street or Franklin Street, or walk four-to-five minutes to Melbourne Central Station via a new underpass.

 

Its opening followed the most crucial project milestone – gaining full accreditation from the Office of the National Rail Safety Regulator on 16 November.

Speaking at a November sneak peek of the new State Library Station for media, Minister for Transport Infrastructure Gabrielle Williams said the completion of the “incredibly exciting project” had been “a long time coming”.

State Library Station is one of the first in Victoria to have toughened-glass, full-platform sliding screen doors installed, which open and close automatically and are synchronized with the arriving/departing train’s doors.

 

“To be able to build something of this scale under the CBD and still ensure that above ground the city was still able to move is quite an engineering feat,” she said.

“We’ve asked the community to work with us for the best part of a decade while we’ve done this – they’ve partnered with us as we’ve disrupted their travel and asked them to change the way they (commute).”

State Library Station’s platforms are about 220 metres in length and are designed to eventually support 10-car trains.

 

To thank the community, free public transport will continue to be offered every weekend, everywhere, until Sunday 1 February.

The new twin nine-kilometre tunnels and 40 kilometres of track effectively double the size of the state capital’s underground rail network and free up the struggling City Loop by taking on all Cranbourne, Pakenham and Sunbury line services.

This coloured-granite jigsaw floor print was assembled by hand and is part of a 35-piece line-wide artwork – Tracks – by Naarm-based First Nations artist Maree Clarke.

 

As well as appeasing city commuters with (expected) increased reliability and less delay, five new strategically placed underground stations now provide regional travellers with better access to key Melbourne precincts.

“This is about giving people more choice in how they move and where they want to get to in our CBD,” Ms Williams said.

Free public transport will continue to be offered every weekend, everywhere in Victoria, until Sunday 1 February.

 

“It’s also about looking to the future and having an eye to how our community is growing and how we can continue to look to have a particular impact.”

Passengers travelling from Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo will generally need only a single transfer (for example, at Footscray or Sunshine) to access the new Tunnel services.

The new Parkville Station brings passengers to the doorsteps of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and the Royal Melbourne Hospital and within a stone’s throw of the Royal Women’s Hospital.

 

Commuters on the Ballarat and Geelong lines, for example, are required to simply change at Footscray on weekdays (Sunshine or Footscray on weekends), while Bendigo lines will also change at Footscray on weekdays (and Sunbury or Footscray on weekends).

Parkville Station’s Grattan Street East exit features a 54–metre-long glass–and–steel canopy, a pedestrian underpass beneath Royal Parade, and provides easy access to the University of Melbourne.

 

Also of note, the new Parkville Station provides train access for all travellers for the first time to Melbourne’s renowned city fringe education, health and research precinct.

The mural covering the eastern facade of Arden Station – Come Together by artist Abdul Abdullah – features two large aluminium hands set against a colourful mosaic background.

 

Its entrances (two on Royal Parade and two on Grattan Street) bring passengers to the doorstep of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and the Royal Melbourne Hospital, and within a stone’s throw of the Royal Women’s Hospital.

State Library Station, with its main entrance on the corner of Swanston and La Trobe streets, also provides convenient access to Melbourne institutions the State Library of Victoria and Queen Victoria Market.

The use of around 104,000 locally manufactured bricks to construct the arches at Arden Station in North Melbourne is a deliberate nod to the suburb’s industrial history.

 

The remaining new stations are Town Hall Station under Swanston Street, Anzac Station under St Kilda Road and Arden Station in North Melbourne.