The answer to the three questions above incidentally are, in order;
- The back end of Dulwich Hill
- Yes, sort of
- I suspect there was space for a platform and a little money left in the budget
On the other side of the station was a residential area, complete with residents. I know this because one walked past me while I was looking at it. I have to admit its a little odd to hop off public transport and be staring at someone's back yard. Normally public transport goes through shopping areas and other places of human gathering. There's usually a bit of a walk before you find somewhere people actually live. It is this more than anything else that speaks to the origins of the light rail as a goods line. Goods lines don't have to go where people gather, they go where industry gathers. Most of the industry is gone now and suburbs have spread so now people have a public transport link in their back yard some way from the shops. Despite this the line is well frequented, much more frequented than planners actually planned for. In this, if nothing else, it resembles every other piece of transport infrastructure in the state.
The presence of the light rail station has its own attractions. At least I assume it does. Advertisements for local real estate companies tout convenience to the light rail as a selling point and I'm sure they wouldn't do that if they didn't think it was desirable. You don't see real estate agents in Kings Cross attempting to talk up their properties by highlighting how handy they are to the heroin injecting centre. There is new development here (very convenient to the light rail). In between old single story houses are some blocks of very new looking apartments. These apartment blocks are both new and rather handsome which I actually thought was an oxymoron. An apartment block is currently being built just down the road from me. The designers need to be taken down to Arlington and have their faces shoved repeatedly into the apartment blocks there until they get the idea.
Not wanting to spend too long hanging out in a children's park or peering into other people's backyards (the terms of my parole are quite strict) I took a five minute walk up to the same bus stop I went to from Dulwich Grove last week and caught a bus into Newtown for lunch.
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