The closure of the T3 Bankstown line for about 12 months is expected to begin mid next year after the main section of the$20 billion Metro City and Southwest line is opened to passengers.
The period that the Bankstown line is now set to be closed to allow work on the rail conversion is shorter than a worst-case scenario of up to 15 months.
The closure of the rail line between Bankstown and Sydenham for the work will be dependent on the completion of the main section of the City and Southwest line. The latter is expected to start carrying passengers in about the middle of next year,and testing of driverless trains on the line has been underway since April.
The government has been considering recommendations in an interim report from areview into Sydney’s $64 billion metro rail projects.
The Bankstown line conversion has been a key focus of the interim report. The extended closure of the existing heavy rail line is likely to spark concern that the extra replacement buses needed to ferry commuters will worsen congestion on local roads.
Transport for NSW has refused a request by theHerald under freedom-of-information laws for access to internal documents that Sydney Metro had prepared for Transport Minister Jo Haylen about options and recommendations for the Bankstown line conversion. The request was declined on grounds that the documents were “intended for submission to cabinet”.