Skip to main content

Freeway link is Five Star for VicRoads

VicRoads, the highways authority for the Australian state of Victoria, has endorsed a major state road project for the first time under its new INVEST five star rating system aimed at encouraging innovation and sustainability in road building. The Western Freeway Anthonys Cutting Alliance’s planning, design and construction management of the US$ 207.3 million (AUS $200 million) freeway link between Melton and Bacchus Marsh was backed by INVEST’s
September 3, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Indigenous signing through Anthonys Cutting
5155 VicRoads, the highways authority for the Australian state of Victoria, has endorsed a major state road project for the first time under its new INVEST five star rating system aimed at encouraging innovation and sustainability in road building.

The Western Freeway Anthonys Cutting Alliance’s planning, design and construction management of the US$ 207.3 million (AUS $200 million) freeway link between Melton and Bacchus Marsh was backed by INVEST’s independent panel of national and international experts.

Dr Helen Murphy, VicRoads director of environmental sustainability, presented the inaugural INVEST star rating to Alliance partners, 4755 John Holland and the VicRoads Western Projects team.

Dr Murphy commended the Alliance for creating a freeway, which opened in June 2011, allowing drivers to avoid the steep hills and low speed curves of the old Western Highway route through Anthonys Cutting.

“In delivering this important project, the Alliance identified and implemented a number of firsts and best practice actions,” she said.

“These included using recycled materials in the road construction, improving road safety through reducing steep grades and tight curves, and the sensitive treatment of indigenous cultural heritage sites in the construction zones.

“The new Western Freeway route which passes through Wurundjeri lands is the first Victorian road project identified with ‘Welcome to Country’ signs.”

John Holland’s operations manager, Michael Lowrie, and VicRoads Western Projects director, John Moylan, accepted the award on behalf of the Alliance.

Lowrie said: “Infrastructure projects tend to measure performance through delivering on time and budget, but tools like INVEST are important to help us measure and benchmark sustainability attributes of the road projects.

“The associated star ratings, which acknowledge sustainable construction, are important to the community and the environment.”

VicRoads INVEST ratings will be applied for all future major Victorian road projects to encourage the industry and road construction contractors to seek innovative solutions, and to apply sustainable practices.

The new star ratings encourage best practice, innovation, research and development of sustainable road construction products and processes.

Under the system, project actions and outcomes are assessed against categories including air quality, biodiversity, road design, energy and water management, noise management, urban design, cultural heritage, resource management, community engagement, and behavioural change/capacity building.

INVEST ratings are based on verification of not just design aspects, but for the delivery of project outcomes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Private consortium to finance Melbourne's Peninsula Link highway
    July 13, 2012
    Not long after the recent completion of the successful EastLink project (a 39km motorway providing a vital connection for 1.5 million people in Melbourne, Australia) the Victorian Government has started work on another missing link in Melbourne's freeway network further south with the construction of Peninsula Link. Peninsula Link is a key project in the Victorian Government's AUD$38 billion (US$32 billion) Victorian Transport Plan. With a AUD$750 million (US$630 million) price tag, the project is expected
  • Making the U-turn
    August 2, 2012
    Political hostility to a toll road project in Australia has been turned around by the quality and amenity of the project writes Adrian Greeman Cars, trucks and vans were taking to the new EastLink toll road in Melbourne with enthusiasm this July, pleased to try out its 39km route for time and cost savings. As well as the convenience of the uncongested route, drivers were also able to view an extraordinary multi-shaded perspective of transparent green and orange noise wall panels, burnt earth-coloured retai
  • World Highways contributor Max Lay wins Peter Nicol Russell award
    December 9, 2014
    The Institution of Engineers Australia has awarded World Highways contributor Dr Maxwell Lay the prestigious Peter Nicol Russell medal for his contribution to science and engineering. According to the citation, the medal is the most prestigious award made by the institution. “The recipient represents the technical, professional and community service standards of engineering to the profession and the community.” May received degrees at Melbourne University and the US university Lehigh in Pennsylvania.
  • Rebuilding the Human Dimension
    June 18, 2012
    We meet with Dr. Essam Sharaf, the former Prime Minister of Egypt, who has been honoured as IRF Personality of the Year for 2011 On 28 March, at a moving ceremony packed with IRF friends and delegates from all over the world, the IRF Personality of the Year Award for 2011 was formally presented to Dr. Essam Abdel-Aziz Sharaf. Discerned annually since 1951, the Award honours individuals universally acknowledged as having made particularly inspirational contributions to the fields of road infrastructure and