While the new line was under pressure from a sea of people,the significance of the day was not lost on many – young and old. The moment was perhaps best summed up by 10-year-old Ryan Gates,who queued with his mum Sonya for several hours to ride on the driverless trains.
"It’s super cool,"said the young train spotter from Como in Sydney’s south.
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More than an hour earlier,Premier Gladys Berejiklian officially opened the line at Tallawong Station at Rouse Hill in Sydney's north west,describing it as a"taste of things to come".
"I am incredibly proud that we denied all of the cynics the opportunity to say it would never happen,” Ms Berejiklian said."I don’t blame people for being cynical in those early days because this project had been promised for decades."
While signalling a change to the way Sydneysiders travel on public transport,the journeys proved to be unexpectedly long for some in the early afternoon. A train stopped at Macquarie Park for up to 20 minutes after a door failed to align correctly. The train was taken out of service but not before it caused flow on delays to other trains for a period.