Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Brisbane Metro is a high-frequency bus rapid transit system that services the city of Brisbane in Queensland, Australia. It consists of two routes that will eventually run through the Brisbane CBD every three minutes during peak times (20bph), transporting up to 3,000 passengers per hour in each direction. [ 1 ]
The new underground Roma Street station will be an extension of the existing ground-level station that will provide direct access to the existing bus and train network as well the proposed Brisbane Metro. Demolition of the Brisbane Transit Centre commenced in December 2019, with it to be relocated partially underground near the underground ...
Brisbane: Queensland Rail Citytrain: Gold Coast, Ipswich, Sunshine Coast: Commuter rail: 150,000 [13] 13: 152: 689 km: 206/km Gold Coast G:link: Light rail 1 19 20 km Adelaide: Adelaide Metro: Commuter rail: 42,880 [14] 6: 81: 126 km: 340/km Glenelg trams: Tram 3 33 15 km Canberra: Canberra Light Rail: Light rail 1 14 12 km
The Brisbane Explorer (superseding the City Sights services) was a non-TransLink prepaid hop-on, hop-off service that visited Brisbane's landmarks, including Mt Coot-tha, on a two-hour journey. Services were suspended in 2017. [32] A new bus rapid transit system, branded the Brisbane Metro was announced in 2016 by the Brisbane City Council. The ...
Construction site of Cross River Rail at Roma Street station in central Brisbane in 2021. On 26 August 2007, the then-Minister for Transport and Main Roads, Paul Lucas, announced the Inner City Rail Capacity Study to look at underground rail access under the Brisbane central business district.
Woolloongabba railway station is a railway station currently under construction as part of the Cross River Rail project in the Brisbane suburb of Woolloongabba.. The new station will be located underground, beneath The Gabba, and will consist of two platforms with a connection to the nearby bus station. [1]
After stopping at King George Square (Platform 2), a number of inbound (southbound) services bypass Queen Street and stop or terminate at the Cultural Centre on the southern side of the Brisbane River, and vice versa. However, King George Square and the Queen Street are only a short walking distance apart.
It is the first Brisbane CBD train station built in more than 120 years. [2] To be built as an underground station directly beneath Albert Street, it will consist of two platforms. [3] Construction commenced in October 2019, with it scheduled to open in 2026. [4] The platforms are built at a depth of 31 metres. [5] [6]