Skip to main content

Melbourne picks PPP deal for roads between Werribee and Footscray

The Australian city of Melbourne has laid out plans for a US$1.4 billion public-private partnership to revamp major city streets. Melbourne is the capital and most populous city in the state of Victoria, and, with around 4.6 million people, the second most populous city in Australia. Some areas of Melbourne are growing by up to 6% a year. More than 700km of suburban roads will be upgraded by 2022 as part of the 20-year construction and maintenance package, said state premier Daniel Andrews. Eight h
November 14, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The Australian city of Melbourne has laid out plans for a US$1.4 billion public-private partnership to revamp major city streets.

Melbourne is the capital and most populous city in the state of Victoria, and, with around 4.6 million people, the second most populous city in Australia. Some areas of Melbourne are growing by up to 6% a year.

More than 700km of suburban roads will be upgraded by 2022 as part of the 20-year construction and maintenance package, said state premier Daniel Andrews.

Eight high-priority roads are targeted, as well as "choke points" on other streets.

The Age newspaper reported that state treasurer Tim Pallas said the project will be paid for by the same availability model that paid for Peninsula Link, a 25km freeway between Carrum Downs and Mount Martha that opened in 2013.

The private sector will receive quarterly payments over 20 years to upgrade the eight roads and maintain the wider western suburban network.

Melbourne has also been considering constructing elevated bike lanes through the central business district. The $72 million “cycle highways” scheme is one of 200 ideas put forward by Infrastructure Victoria, a Victoria state agency, to improve public transportation in the next 30 years. The agency estimates that more than 81,000 bike trips are recorded in Melbourne each weekday, according to a report by ABC News last June.

Related Content

  • Road pricing could boost UK road investment
    July 4, 2012
    UK road users receive a mere £4 billion in capital investment, and congestion increases. Road pricing could provide the roads needed and reduce taxes, says a new report UK motorists receive a "paltry" £4 billion (€5 billion) investment in road capacity in return for the €57.5 billion a year they contribute in road user taxes, according to the 2008/9 Road File, published by the UK Road Users Alliance (RUA). Over the last decade, this infrastructure spend has led to a minimal 1% increase in the road network t
  • US$3.4 billion Peru PPP road partnership
    April 11, 2024
    A US$3.4 billion Peru PPP road partnership deal has been awarded for Lima.
  • Bolivia's Santa Cruz road corridor connector project
    December 22, 2016
    Bolivia’s ambitious Santa Cruz road corridor connector project is providing an important link for the country - Gordon Feller writes The World Bank has been organising a US$230 million loan to upgrade a vital connector linking the country’s northern and southern transit corridors. Meanwhile, another $100 million is coming from Bolivia’s government.