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Melbourne Transport |
Common Urban Myths About TransportMyth:
Melbourne's outer suburbs aren't suited to public transport use
Fact:
Melbourne's outer suburbs are built to the same density as inner and middle
suburbs with higher rates of public transport use. There is little
difference in form between older 'train' suburbs like Mitcham and Frankston
and newer 'car' suburbs like Rowville; the only difference is historical,
between public transport provision in one, and non-provision in the other.
Closely related to the common idea that Melbourne's suburbs can't support public transport because they're too spread-out and low-density is the idea that there are really two Melbournes: the inner city, historically older, built to high densities, and eminently suited to public transport; and the outer suburbs, built to low densities during the age of the car, and irredeemably car-dependent. Thus, a common theme in newspaper reports, academic papers and planning documents is to proclaim that public transport in Melbourne is doomed because of all the new housing construction taking place on the urban fringe.
Shocking as this is all supposed to sound, all it does is restate the same statistics about transport habits that have applied in virtually every new Melbourne suburb since the 1950s. All such suburbs record extremely high levels of car use, and the reason is not lifestyle choices: most Melburnians have favoured big houses in the suburbs ever since the 19th century. The real reason is even simpler. Newer suburbs were never provided with a decent public transport alternative, and still remain without usable public transport to this day. So for the last 50 years, the buyers of new suburban homes have been given no choice in the matter. If there is a choice, it's between using a car for all household travel on the one hand, or giving up the suburban dream on the other. Since Melburnians aren't martyrs, they responded rationally by taking up car use faster than almost any other city in the world. The single-minded focus on cars within Melbourne's official planning circles is so entrenched and ubiquitous, it has even made its way into 'serious' Australian fiction.
More worrying is the tendency for planners to use historical neglect of public transport to excuse a continued emphasis on roads, thus ensuring the neglect continues. All too frequently, deficiencies in public transport in Melbourne or Sydney are shrugged off as something that can't be helped, while road congestion is held to require urgent government attention (ideally in the form of expensive new roads).
But development in Melbourne's outer suburbs - including Wayne Macauley's birthplace, Mitcham - hasn't always been so car-dependent, nor has public transport in the suburbs always been so poor. While the 'two cities' story may apply to many American cities, the history of suburban development in Melbourne is quite different.
The basic form of Melbourne, with its radial corridors interspersed with
'green wedges', dates back to the 1880s land boom, and many quite distant
suburbs can trace their origin to this period. These suburbs owed their
existence to public transport, as it was the train services that allowed
people to live in the suburbs and commute to work in the city long before
anyone had cars. As the diagram shows, nearly all of Melbourne's train
system was in place prior to the end of the 19th century, as were outlying
suburbs such as Lilydale, Epping, Ferntree Gully and Mordialloc.
Because of its extensive suburban rail network, 'Marvellous Melbourne' was at the turn of the 20th century one of the most spread-out, sprawling, low-density cities in the world. But this 'sprawl' was serviced by, and made possible by, public transport. As geographer Clive Forster writes:
Contemporary accounts from the 19th century sound uncannily similar to comments made about urban sprawl today - despite the fact that cars had barely been invented, let alone seen in Melbourne:
So Bernard Salt is actually quite correct to say that Melbourne Similarly, the advent of electric tramways in the early 20th century extended the 'sprawl' to the land in between the rail lines, greatly enlarging existing suburbs and creating entire new suburbs such as Balwyn, Niddrie and East Brighton. This pattern of development lasted until the middle of the century, by which time all the land within what is now Zone 1 had been developed, and beyond this the suburbs extended along the rail corridors to Broadmeadows, Epping, Lilydale, Frankston, and similarly far-flung locations. Since then, there has been remarkably little change in the style of development in Melbourne: new suburbs have extended out from old suburbs in a contiguous manner, filling in many of the remaining gaps between the train lines, just as the pattern was in the first half of the 20th century. The main difference has been that planners, mesmerised by the promise of the motor car, ceased to insist that public transport services be extended to new subdivisions before people moved in. In short, the new suburbs built since 1950 have become car-dependent, not because of their particular form, but through a lack of provision of transport alternatives. Whatever the RACV may say, train-less Rowville has the same built form as Glen Waverley, and it makes just as much sense to build a train line there now as it did to build the Glen Waverley line in 1930.
It can come as quite a surprise that 'new' suburbs on the urban fringe have roughly the same population density as 'old' suburbs in the inner city. Nonetheless it turns out that although houses tend to be larger in the outer suburbs, they also have more people living in them compared with the one or two-bedroom terraces of the inner suburbs, so the overall population density works out the same. The following table compares two specific suburbs: Kings Park (a recent subdivision near St Albans, about 20km from the city) and North Fitzroy (a 19th-century suburb about 5km from the city).
Source: ABS Census data, cited in Mees, A Very Public Solution Our page on transport and population density provides more examples of the similarity between 'old' and 'new' suburbs. The situation in Melbourne contrasts markedly with most United States cities, which remained relatively compact until well into the twentieth century, then spread outwards rapidly under the influence of the car. Urban development in these cities proceeded in a haphazard manner, with new residential subdivisions springing up in rural locations quite remote from the existing urban area. The term 'urban sprawl' was originally coined to describe this kind of unplanned, non-contiguous development. By comparison, Melbourne's urban development looks quite orderly. The spread of the urban area occurred much earlier than in US cities, and under the influence of public transport rather than car travel. Even when Melbourne's urban planning became subservient to the car, the city continued to develop as a contiguous built-up area, and with block sizes rather smaller than their US equivalents. As a result, Melbourne even now retains an urban form in which large-scale public transport networks are viable.
In conclusion, Melbourne needs better public transport in its outer suburbs because people prefer living in detached houses, not despite this. We know public transport in these suburbs is viable both from overseas experience, and because Melbourne itself boasts successful tram services in some inner suburbs that have the same built form as the outer suburbs. All that is keeping the suburbs car-dependent is planning inertia, not tired academic arguments about detached houses or Dame Edna making car use compulsory.
© 2010 Public Transport Users Association Inc. (PTUA), Victoria, Australia. ABN 83 801 487 611. Last modified: 8 April 2010 |