Early history The 1955
Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle, also known as the
Stephenson–Hepburn Report, proposed a railway line branching off the
Eastern Railway (
Midland line) at
Bayswater, then heading north through
Morley to reach
Walter Road and then north-west to terminate near
Wanneroo Road. When the
Metropolitan Region Scheme was adopted in 1963, the land for the proposed railway was not reserved. The
North-East Corridor Structure Plan was published in 1994, and called for the
rezoning of
Ellenbrook for urban development and the reservation of a public
transport corridor to Ellenbrook. Later that year, the government commissioned the
North-East Corridor Transit Route Reserve Study to determine a route for the corridor between the
Reid Highway / Lord Street junction and the Midland line. The study did not consider a station at Broun Avenue, only considering stations for Morley at Walter Road or
Morley Drive, with the Walter Road site favoured due to there being no highway interchange there.
Construction Constructing the Ellenbrook line by 2023 as part of the
Metronet project was committed to by the
Labor Party before it won the
2017 state election. During planning and construction, the line was known as the Morley–Ellenbrook line. The route of the Ellenbrook line was officially revealed in August 2019, confirming that it would run in the Tonkin Highway median strip and that Morley station would be located at Broun Avenue.
median strip, June 2021|alt=A concrete bridge over a highway with construction vehicles within the highway median strip As part of the
Tonkin Gap project, enabling works were completed for the Ellenbrook line, which included modifications to drainage and barriers along Tonkin Highway and a rebuild of the Broun Avenue bridge for the Morley station bus interchange. Construction for the Tonkin Gap Ellenbrook line enabling works began in November 2020. The
A$753million main construction contract for the Morley–Ellenbrook line was awarded to the MELconnx Consortium, consisting of
Laing O'Rourke, in October 2020. In April 2022, the thirty-eight-year-old Broun Avenue bridge was demolished, which required a weekend shutdown of Tonkin Highway. The final bridge beam out of eighteen beams was installed by September 2022. To make way for the Morley station multi-storey car park, the Wotton Skate Park had to be relocated. After several different locations were considered, the opposite side of Wotton Reserve was chosen as the location for the new skate park. The skate park was built by the City of Bayswater using $2.5million of state government funding. Construction began in April 2022. The new City of Bayswater Skate Park opened to the public in November 2022. On 10 December 2022, a and
vert ramp, the largest one in Perth, was opened. By November 2024, Morley station was complete. The station and the rest of the line were officially opened on Sunday, 8 December 2024 by Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese, Premier
Roger Cook and Transport Minister
Rita Saffioti, with community events held at each of the five new stations. To avoid confusion with Morley station, the existing Morley bus station at the Galleria Shopping Centre was renamed
Galleria bus station upon the Ellenbrook line's opening. ==Services==