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North-west T-way

North-West T-Way
Tway logo.png
Overview
Type Bus rapid transit
System T-ways
Status Active
Locale Sydney
Termini Parramatta; Blacktown
Rouse Hill; Parklea
Stations 31
Services 2
Operation
Opened March 2007 (Parramatta - Merriville)
November 2007 (Blacktown - Parklea)
Owner Transport for NSW
Operator(s) Busways
Hillsbus
Technical
Line length 24 km (15 mi)

The North-West T-way is a bus rapid transit line in the north-western suburbs of Sydney, Australia. T-way is short for rapid bus transitway.

The T-way consists of two sections, one linking Parramatta railway station and Rouse Hill, the other linking Blacktown and Parklea. The lines intersect at Burns interchange in Parklea. For the most part, stops are named for the streets they are located upon.

The T-way was approved in February 2004 and the Merriville to Parramatta section opened on 10 March 2007. Sanctuary and Rouse Hill opened on 25 September 2007 upon the opening of the Rouse Hill Town Centre development. The final section, the Blacktown to Parklea branch, opened 4 November 2007. The T-way is the second in Sydney: the Liverpool-Parramatta T-way has operated since February 2003.

The T-way was a joint venture between the NSW Ministry of Transport and the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority. The A$330 million contract to design, built and maintain until 2017 was awarded to Leighton Contractors in 2005.

The project was approved in February 2004 and construction began in mid-2005. Construction was expected to take just over two years and cost $524 million. According to a report in The Sydney Morning Herald, many of the costly design mistakes made in the development of the Liverpool-Parramatta T-way have been avoided on the North-West T-way.

The 24-kilometre-long (15 mi) T-way includes:

The T-way and its operations has come under criticism in several areas. Even before its opening, the Roads and Traffic Authority was criticised for its lack of planning and broken promises on the T-way's construction. Parramatta Council complained during construction that noise walls had not been built next to the homes of residents who lived along the T-way route, causing them distress. The planned cycleway alongside the T-way was not built in its entire length, and included a large deviation which Council complained would erode the cycleway's effectiveness. After the opening of the first stage of the T-way, a local cycle advocacy group identified a large gap in the cycleway, potentially compromising cyclists' safety. Some local residents had their backyards destroyed.


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