First look at the roomy new tram coming to Melbourne’s network Patrick Hatch October 17, 2025 — 5.00am
The first new tram to operate in Melbourne for over a decade will roll through the city’s inner-west later this year as part of a testing program now underway.
The G-class tram is a new model that will gradually replace outdated high-floor Z- and A-class trams on routes 57 (from West Maribyrnong), 59 (Airport West) and 82 (Footscray to Moonee Ponds).
Victoria has committed $1.85 billion to building 100 G-classes over the next four years. The first is expected to enter service from mid-2026 and promises improved accessibility and comfort.
Two have now been built at the Alstom factory in Dandenong and last month one was delivered to a new purpose-built depot in Maidstone, which Transport Minister Gabrielle Williams will officially open on Friday.
Ben Phyland, head of rolling stock and ticketing at the Department of Transport and Planning, said a program of testing was now underway for the depot facilities, which include an automated “tram scanner” that checks arriving trams for damage or maintenance issues – a first in Victoria.
By the end of this year, the G-class will venture out of the depot and start testing on parts of routes 57, 59 and 82.
“That will consist of loading up the vehicle to effectively simulate a crush load tram and making sure that it can brake in the shortest distance possible, and that it can accelerate in the right way,” he said.
“What happens if the power drops out, what happens if it fails? We’re testing all the different functionality of the tram, both electrically and mechanically.”
The G-class is based on an Alstom model already in service in several other cities but has been modified to withstand Melbourne’s network – which is the largest in the world and unforgiving compared to networks where tracks do not embed in asphalt roads.
The new tram will eventually be tested along all 250 kilometres of the Melbourne tram network to ensure it is up to the job.
Phyland said the first new trams should enter service around the middle of next year, with route 59’s Z-class trams – built between 1975 and
1984 – replaced first, followed by A-class models.
Passengers should enjoy less crowding in rush hour. At 25 metres long, the G-class is around 10 metres longer than the Z and A classes and has room for more than twice the passengers – 150 in total, with 48 seated.
Low floors mean the tram is accessible for commuters with disabilities, the elderly and those with prams.
“We’ve had a lot of stakeholder input to the design to try and make it as accessible as possible,” Phyland said, with the floor lowered an additional 20 millimetres to make boarding easier.
The last tram model introduced to Victoria was the E-class in 2013. The G-class is shorter to suit the tighter routes where it will be deployed and to fit existing tram stops.
Alstom technician Elliot Rushworth is the first person to obtain a licence for the G-class and will be behind the controls during testing and commissioning at Maidstone.
He said that even compared to the E-class, the new model felt roomier.
There’s more space in the aisle between the seats and the shorter grab rail opens up the central standing area.
“The disability access area, I think the punters are going to love that.
There’s just a lot more room to move,” Rushworth said.
Around 43 per cent of Yarra Tram services are now operated with accessible low-floor trams, while only 29 per cent of stops are accessible.
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The main issue with the Es was that they were too big for most services.
They are a great tram doing a great job on the routes they are deployed on, but too big for many other routes for various reasons including tram stop length required and volume of traffic.
Their deployment on the low traffic LaTrobe St shuttle is evidence that they didn't have anywhere else to use them.
Perhaps with extra Es being deployed on Port Melbourne services some C1s will end up on LaTrobe St?
The Es are an excellent design and the G class will hopefully repeat the achievement.
The G class battery addresses the power issue (which is about start up surge, not overall consumption).
Agree with TP that the fixed truck in the short centre section on the G, allowing a wider aisle, is a good design.
However, the front doorway leading to a narrow aisle may cause congestion there.
Mal Rowe who uses these trams as well as reviewing them
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On 23 Oct 2025, at 12:23, Mark Skinner <eme...@gmail.com> wrote:
I understand all that, and certainly expect a bias toward slower builds. However, when there are almost no Melbourne style fast builds, it implies that there are almost no critical sections of track.For example, there was a short section of track near the famous Anděl tram spotting point. Maybe 40m of straight track on the line to Řepy/Kotlařka. It took over a week to do something that Melbourne would have done overnight. Of course, they routed it via na Knížecí, but, because of the other busy routes impacted, there were tram jams that week.Sure, there's plenty of ability to work through the summer low season, but critical junctions and extremely busy sections still exist, even then.Photo showing tram jam due to diversion works in Prague.Mark Skinner
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I'd say it's been a while since railway and tramway turnouts and crossings have been manufactured in Australia. DPP Prague has its own special-work manufacturer, Prague Engineering, which also exports around the world, including to Melbourne and Auckland. Another Czech special work manufacturer, DT-Výhybkárna a Strojírna, also supplies tramway special work to Melbourne, Sydney, Gold Coast and Canberra and railway special work to ARTC and other Australian railway operations. The work is assembled on the factory floor and then, presumably, partly dismantled for export and reassembled at the site.Pražská strojírna is located at Vinoř on the outskirts of Prague and DT is located at Prostějov, about 50 km from Brno.
Thus is former Australian industry being scattered to the four corners of the globe. Meanwhile CKD or part-assembly is being promoted by dishonest politicians as Australian manufacturing. In part unavoidable, because the third-party OEM suppliers have gone belly-up in Australia and even local manufacturers have to source these inputs overseas.
Davies and Baird of Melbourne were probably the last manufacturer of 'special work' in Australia.
They started making wheels for the Melbourne cable trams.
They supplied Melbourne, Toronto and Christchurch in recent times. The attached pic shows a pair of crossings ready to ship to Christchurh in 2024 - one of their last orders.
Once Yarra started using heel less points they lost viable quantities to continue with that product line.
MOTAT in Auckland just installed dual gauge points manufactured by PRAŽSKÁ STROJÍRNA in Prague.
Mal Rowe - who visited the D&B plant as a guest of Dave Hinman
There appears to be only one rail rolling line left in Australia at Wyalla and it's operators appear to think it too hard to change out the rollers for different profiles. Presumably they are making enough money turning out heavy mainline grade rails that that it's not worth their down time to change out the rollers for tramway or other 'unusual' profiles.
Whyalla seems to stagger from one financial crisis to the next, it obviously doesn't make the sort of money investors want to see.
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Tony P wrote:
It will be for MoTaT. Its tracks are dual gauge, to accommodate Wellington trams as well as the standard-gauge former Auckland trams,
Auckland doesn’t have actual trams. Auckland Transport was about to start work on a line from the city to Dominion Road in 2017 but that plan was trashed by the gadget-bahn people getting to the incoming transport minister, Phil Twyford, who managed to do nothing about it except spend millions planning the gadget-bahn, which was abandoned when the cost became even more than gargantuan. Phil’s sole achievement was closing Wellington’s big modern trolleybus system on the very day he took office. The eighth anniversary of that is later this week, Halloween.
dmcl