Melbourne Airport Rail Stage One shortlist: design and interface notes for engineers
Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

First reported on Roads & Infrastructure (AU)
30 Second Briefing
Two construction consortiums have been shortlisted to deliver the final works package for Melbourne Airport Rail Stage One, which will build the new dedicated airport rail corridor between West Footscray and the existing network towards Tullamarine. The wider project will provide a continuous CBD–Melbourne Airport link, requiring significant rail duplication, new track connections and interface works with existing suburban and regional lines. Shortlisting signals imminent procurement of major civil, rail systems and structures contracts, with early geotechnical, drainage and corridor access planning now critical for contractors and designers.
Technical Brief
- Shortlisted consortiums are expected to coordinate tightly with existing metropolitan and regional rail operations during construction.
- Interface works will require staged possessions and night-time occupations to maintain airport and CBD rail services.
- Brownfield corridor constraints near West Footscray imply complex utility relocations and protection of live assets.
- Drainage and flood immunity design along the airport corridor must integrate with existing freeway and creek systems.
- Signalling and train control upgrades must be compatible with current metropolitan standards and future high-capacity operations.
Our Take
Melbourne Airport Rail Stage One adds to a steady pipeline of Victorian Government rail and road grade-separation works in our database, including the Ruthven Street and Diggers Rest level crossing removals, signalling that bidders will be assessed on proven delivery of complex brownfield interfaces around Melbourne.
With only two consortiums shortlisted, competition is narrower than on some other Australian rail packages in our coverage, which typically increases the emphasis on non-price criteria such as disruption management through the Melbourne CBD and integration with existing lines at West Footscray and Tullamarine.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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