On 15 June 2005,
Premier Bob Carr shortly before his resignation announced the Metropolitan Rail Expansion Program (MREP). The MREP consisted of three new rail connections: • a
North West Rail Link from
Cheltenham to
Rouse Hill • a
South West line between Glenfield and
Leppington in Sydney's South West • a
CBD Rail Link between Redfern and Chatswood Estimated to cost about $8 billion, $5 billion of which was for the building of a new tunnel under the
Sydney Harbour Bridge and the
Sydney central business district, (called the
CBD Rail Link). Under this plan, the north-west suburbs would be served by the
North West Rail Link by 2017, the new south-west suburbs would be linked to the network via the
South West Rail Link by 2015, and the rail line would pass through the new growth corridor from Ryde to the airport. Critics of the New South Wales government criticised what they perceived as a lack of follow through, citing the previously planned Parramatta to Chatswood rail link which had since been truncated to link only Epping to Chatswood, with the Epping to Parramatta portion postponed indefinitely. It would also have included quadrupled lines between
St Leonards and
Chatswood on the
North Shore line. In 2006, Premier
Morris Iemma placed planning controls along two potential corridors in the CBD (the MetroWest and MetroPitt routes) to secure future accessibility. That same year construction began on the latter half which was completed seven years later as the
Epping to Chatswood railway line. However the other half was postponed indefinitely in 2003 by Transport Minister
Michael Costa citing a lack of projected passenger numbers and economic viability. On 11 August 2010, the
Rudd Federal Government promised $2.6 billion towards this project, which, along with the NSW State Labor Government, would have constructed a line from Parramatta to Epping through the Carlingford line. Work was due to start in 2011, with a prospected 2017 finish, but the
O'Farrell government cancelled the project, instead requesting that Federal funding be diverted to a more expensive upgrade of the
Pacific Highway. The
Gillard Federal Government responded by revoking the funding altogether.
North West Rail Link After its original announcement in 1998 for completion in 2010 as part of the
Action for Transport 2010 plan, in 2006 the schedule was revised for completion in 2017 and later brought forward to a staged plan for train services to Castle Hill and Hills Centre in 2015, and to Rouse Hill by 2017. It was planned to be 22 kilometres in length, consisting of a 16 kilometre section in tunnel from Epping to the proposed Burns Road Station, followed by a 4 kilometre section above ground from Burns Road to Rouse Hill. Six new stations were proposed to be constructed at Franklin Road,
Castle Hill, Hills Centre, Norwest, Burns Road and
Rouse Hill. A train stabling facility was proposed at the north west of
Rouse Hill Town Centre. The NWRL was to connect with the
Epping to Chatswood Rail Link through a direct tunnel between
Epping and Franklin Road stations, although an original proposal connected with the existing
Northern line north of
Cheltenham. The direct route was to use the stub tunnels originally built for the deferred Parramatta Rail Link between
Parramatta and
Epping. and drilling commenced on 7 September 2011.
South West Rail Link The
South West Rail Link was announced as part of the Metropolitan Rail Expansion Program to cater to the "South West Growth Centre". It was to consist of a 12-kilometre, twin-track railway running from
Leppington and
Edmondson Park to connect with the
South line at Glenfield. The project also included a train stabling facility to the west of the new Leppington station, and a redesigned and expanded Glenfield station with flyovers to connect with the
East Hills line. On 31 October 2008, the Premier revealed that the South West Rail Link was to be 'indefinitely shelved' due to budgetary constraints, and only an upgrade of the
Glenfield Station car park was to proceed. On 14 November 2009, the then-New South Wales Premier
Nathan Rees announced that construction of stage two of the South West Rail Link would begin in mid-2010, with completion scheduled for 2016.
CBD Rail Link The third component to the MREP was the
CBD Rail Link, a new underground railway line starting at
Redfern station, travelling under the Central Business District and under
Sydney Harbour, through the Northern Sydney suburbs and ending at the existing
Chatswood railway station. The six kilometre cross-tunnel was slated to cost $5 billion and was to include new or expanded stations at
Redfern,
Central,
Pitt Street,
Martin Place,
Circular Quay, Victoria Cross, Crows Nest,
St Leonards,
Artarmon and
Chatswood. On 13 September 2007, it looked unlikely that the New South Wales government would commit to the line when they announced a proposal for a metro line that would span the harbour, the
Anzac Line (see below). On 19 March 2008 the State Government announced that the line would be on hold after construction begins on the
North West Metro in 2010, its role to be partly superseded by that railway line. In October 2008, the North West Metro line itself was cancelled and replaced with a shorter CBD metro which would partly follow the alignment of the CBD Rail Link. ==Metro proposals, 2008==