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The current inland rail project is from Melbourne to Brisbane. As far as I know there are no plans to extend the rail any further at this time. I propose this page be reworked to focus on the current project, with reference to any cancelled plans noted in a 'history section and any hypothetical future expansion plans noted in a subsection. Porjo ( talk) 06:16, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
We at the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development have noticed that this page is not up-to-date and contains some factual inaccuracies, dead links and some project information gaps. There have been recent announcements and actions moving the Inland Railway project along, including the formation of the Inland Rail Implementation Group and an Australian Government committment of $300 million as first stage investment in the project.
Below are some resources with more information and updates about the Inland Rail project:
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help)More than half of the external links on the Inland Railway page are currently deadlinks, below are the citations to fix the dead links, including archiveurls. The resources above provide more up-to-date information and could supplement these links.
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help)Dept.Infrastructure ( talk) 23:55, 11 June 2014 (UTC)
First, I won't edit myself, I left Wikipedia long ago. Second, my proposal to you is to re-read the 2nd sentence under 'Overview'. It says there:
Isolated sections of the line would be built with dual gauge sleepers to facilitate a change of gauge or conversion to dual gauge at a later date.
We all know that Australia is committed to standard gauge, so why not delete the 'change of gauge or' part, such that the definite statement would be
Isolated sections of the line would be built with dual gauge sleepers to facilitate a conversion to dual gauge at a later date.
Otherwise you're saying that they keep the backdoor open for a change of gauge of the line (or sections of it - to narrow or broad gauge?!), which isn't very likely, after all. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 45.56.151.39 ( talk) 07:49, 17 November 2015 (UTC)
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 12:50, 17 January 2016 (UTC)
...this would be good. Boscaswell talk 21:31, 10 December 2017 (UTC)
... To get that close but not go to the port of Brisbane seems a shame
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hi there, I am looking to change the title of the Article as well the content and would like to know more on how this can be achieved. I work for ARTC Inland Rail and have been authorised to update this page.
We need to change the title from Inland Railway to Inland Rail.
I am currently working on the body text with a colleague of mine and will be updating the content shortly.
If you need to reach me please email me at mgreenwood@artc.com.au — Preceding unsigned comment added by ARTC Inland Rail ( talk • contribs) 00:18, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
The bulk of this was sourced to companies connected with the project, press releases, reports submitted by companies. A much less charitable version was sourced to the Australian government. It was very negative and that's the best I can say for it. Article must be rebuilt by adding content cited from reliable sources that are unconnected with the subject and have a reputation for fact checking." -- Deep fried okra (schalte ein) 09:36, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
@ Victor Schmidt: I gutted the thing and removed the negative, poorly sourced content. If you feel I was overly zealous, please feel free to add back. 09:42, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm no expert on this subject, however I have identified some sources which we could use to build up this article. I would add info on how 1200 km of track is to be upgraded, and only 500 km is new track. I read somewhere that it is not one project, but 13 in one, however it's from the ARTC website, so it's not a secondary source. [ [1]] [ [2]] [ [3]] [ [4]] Fork99 ( talk) 01:54, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
hi all, i have just removed the notability tag as this subject is notable ie. here are some recent ABC articles covering it: