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Posted: 2024-08-08 02:04:13

Jin Zi has enjoyed life in Box Hill for more than a decade.

A few years ago, Ms Jin, who is in her 60s, purchased an apartment opposite Box Hill Gardens, a popular green park, close to shops and public transport, to enjoy her "golden years".

Now, everywhere she turns, she is surrounded by construction.

"It is extremely inconvenient at the moment," Ms Jin said. 

"Finding a parking spot in the area has become nearly impossible."

The disruptions stem from major works on a new underground station in Box Hill that will form part of the $35 billion dollar eastern section of the Victorian state government's controversial Suburban Rail Loop Project (SRL).

Jin Zi poses for a footpath in front of a fenced off area of park being used for construction.

Box Hill resident Jin Zi is dismayed at the prospect of being surrounded by construction works for the next 10 years. (ABC News: Jason Fang)

Across Box Hill's city centre there are partial road closures, removal of dozens of car park spaces, dust, and the noise of construction.

The government has already compulsorily acquired hundreds of homes and businesses that will be demolished, including an entire apartment building on Elland Avenue that was built less than a decade ago.

Even the park Ms Jin visits every day has not been spared. Currently, a quarter of it has been closed to accommodate digging for the new station.

According to the state government, parts of the park will be occupied for the next six or seven years, before it is returned to the public.

Whitehorse Rd construction in front of Box Hill Central 01

Traffic congestion is at an all-time high in Box Hill as works for the new Suburban Rail Loop station progress.(ABC News: Jarrod Fankhauser)

City of Whitehorse councillor Blair Barker said this was the reality facing constituents in his municipality and eventually those in other suburbs in metropolitan Melbourne earmarked for SRL stations.

"With the amount of construction that's going on in Box Hill, I'm concerned about a generation of kids that will grow up knowing large parts of Box Hill as just a construction site," Cr Barker said.   

"We are just the first municipality to go through this."

But Box Hill's construction woes are not limited to the Suburban Rail Loop; there's also the North-East Link and a new tower development, said Cr Barker.

Large cranes for private developments can be seen dotted along the suburb's already tower-rich skyline, which is the tallest outside of Melbourne's CBD.

In June, the state government fast tracked approval for the $1.57 billion Box Hill Central North Masterplan proposed by shopping centre behemoth Vicinity Centres, who are part-owners of Chadstone Shopping Centre. 

The plan for the mixed-use precinct in the heart of Box Hill includes seven towers of up to 50 storeys.

Across all the projects underway, the council predicts the loss of 15 MCG ovals of open space across Burwood and Box Hill.

The question now for the council and the Victorian state government is how to ease impacts on residents' lives.

Major development inevitable in Box Hill

In 1954, when the then-Melbourne Metropolitan Planning Scheme designated a sleepy low-lying suburb 14 kilometres east of Melbourne's CBD as a "district business centre" the writing was on the wall, said prominent planning expert Marcus Spiller.

"Box Hill has always been on the radar," said Dr Spiller, who is a founding partner at SGS Economics and Planning and has previously consulted with the government on background research for the SRL project.

"It was always regarded as a major secondary centre for economic and residential because of its proximity to the city and transport infrastructure," he said.

"Through the decades, Commonwealth and state governments have invested in making that happen.

"The Suburban Rail Loop is in some ways a continuation of the story."

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