MARIBYRNONG & HOBSONS BAY
Home » News » Western Distributor long tunnel given the green light

Western Distributor long tunnel given the green light

The state government has headed off a clash with Maribyrnong council and Yarraville residents by announcing three-kilometre twin tunnels beneath Yarraville to connect directly with the West Gate Freeway.

A design for the $5.5 billion Western Distributor tollway, released on recently, confirms the new tunnels will begin west of Williamstown Road, rather than the alternative shorter tunnel starting on industrial Yarraville land linked to the freeway by flyover ramps.

The decision was welcomed by Maribyrnong mayor Cameron McDonald and community groups Concerned Locals of Yarraville (CLoY) and Friends of Stony Creek.

CLoY spokesman Scott Ellerton said the group would continue to have input on ramp alignment, ventilation stack standards and locations, noise barriers and truck curfews.

Hobsons Bay council and Spotswood South Kingsville Western Distributor Residents Group (SSKRG) are upset that one of two new ramps funnelling dangerous-goods trucks directly between Hyde Street and the freeway will pass close to sports fields and a kindergarten.

The state government said the ramps would be as close as possible to each side of – and level to or lower than – the West Gate Freeway.

But SSKRG spokeswoman Grace Guinto said that by moving trucks closer to Emma McLean Kindergarten, Donald McLean Reserve and Spotswood residents, the government had just pushed the problem to “the other side [south] of the freeway”.

“Considering a key objective of this project is to reduce the impacts of [diesel fumes] on children in the inner west, it seems a questionable decision,” she said.

Maribyrnong Truck Action Group and the Greens have welcomed the longer tunnel but want adequate filtration and a total truck ban to avoid rat-running through the area, in turn to avoid tolls.

Williamstown MP Wade Noonan said the project would take about 6000 trucks off inner-west residential streets.

“For too long [residents] had to live with the noise and pollution of the trucks moving through local roads.”

Roads Minister Luke Donnellan said the design was a result of extensive community consultation.

“This is very much about moving those trucks off the inner-city streets,” he said.

Hobsons Bay mayor Peter Hemphill said the council welcomes the long tunnel, but a ramp to the south of the freeway will impact local Spotswood industry, residents, recreation areas and the local kindergarten.

Three construction consortiums have been shortlisted.

Construction will begin in 2018 and be completed by 2022. Public information sessions begin in Footscray on Monday. Details: westerndistributorproject.vic.gov.au

Digital Editions


  • ED closing date set

    ED closing date set

    Footscray Hospital’s emergency team wants the community to be aware of a very specific time – 8am on Wednesday 18 February. “That’s when the emergency…

More News

  • Braybrook ramps up for BMX fest

    Braybrook ramps up for BMX fest

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532725 Melbourne’s inner-west will take centre stage this weekend at the Braybrook BMX Festival, a three-day celebration of action sports, youth culture and community,…

  • Former Cash Converters operators penalised

    Former Cash Converters operators penalised

    The Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO) has secured a total of $112,985 in penalties against the former operators of three Cash Converters stores in Melbourne’s north and west. The Federal Circuit…

  • Maidstone church fire suspicious

    Maidstone church fire suspicious

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 207786 A fire at a Maidstone church early on Sunday morning is being treated as suspicious. Fire crews were called to the church on…

  • Events heat up the west

    Events heat up the west

    Summer is heating up across the west with a mix of music, culture and experiences for locals to enjoy. Love Westside has put together a guide for February and March,…

  • Who are these Australians?

    Who are these Australians?

    The iconic ‘Three Well-Known Australians’ has made its way to Melbourne’s west for a limited time. The work, painted by Martin Shaw in 1982, depicts three figures – a blue,…

  • From the archives

    From the archives

    Star Weekly looks back on the pages of our predecessors. 40 years ago 12 February, 1986 A $6000 Western Suburbs fishing club development in Williamstown could face a State Government…

  • Rams ready for finals

    Rams ready for finals

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532910 Newport Rams are fine tuning things ahead of finals in the Baseball Victoria summer league women’s premier 1 first competition. The Rams, who…

  • New

    New

    Nearly a thousand new doctors are entering Victoria’s public health system this month, with a significant number allocated to hospitals serving Melbourne’s western and northern growth corridors. Among the 965…

  • Support Sweethearts for HeartKids

    Support Sweethearts for HeartKids

    Every day in Australia, eight babies are born with a childhood-onset heart disease (CoHD), and during February HeartKids is calling on Australians to help support these children and their families…

  • Walk to Work Day coming

    Walk to Work Day coming

    The Pedestrian Council of Australia has announced a new initiative for Walk to Work Day, partnering with the Black Dog Institute to highlight the mental health benefits of walking. The…