The iconic St Kilda Road precinct is one step closer to being connected to Melbourne’s train network for the first time with major construction now completed on the new Anzac Station.
Anzac Station will connect passengers to jobs, schools and iconic destinations including the Shrine of Remembrance, Royal Botanic Gardens and Albert Park.
Sitting 15 metres below St Kilda Rd, Anzac Station features soaring skylights filling the station with natural light and four entrances linking to a new pedestrian underpass beneath St Kilda Rd, including lift access to the Shrine grounds.
The station’s platforms are 14 metres wide and 290 metres long – and all up, Anzac Station has an underground footprint that’s larger than the MCG.
At its peak, around 450 workers were onsite every day building the state-of-the-art station – installing 12 escalators, Victorian-first screen doors and realigning St Kilda Road four times.
With the completion of major construction, Domain Road is also expected to open to pedestrians, cyclists and drivers next month – after being shut since 2017.
The Anzac Station tram stop opened in 2022 and has extra-long platforms that can fit four trams at a time to accommodate large crowds attending major events including Anzac Day and the Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix.
The stop is Melbourne’s first direct tram and train interchange – with Anzac Station taking pressure off the world’s busiest tram corridor and delivering a seamless connection between tram and train services.
The Metro Tunnel will connect the busy Sunbury, Cranbourne and Pakenham lines through twin tunnels under the city, creating an end-to-end rail line with 97kms of continuous track from the north-west to the south-east – freeing up space in the City Loop and creating capacity to run more trains more often.
Anzac Station will open in 2025 as part of the Sunbury to Cranbourne / Pakenham line.