What we heard and next steps


September 5, 2023

In March and April this year, City of Melbourne asked the community in Southbank to identify pedestrian and road safety issues they have experienced in the neighbourhood and possible improvements that could be made to improve safety. The consultation took place online through Participate Melbourne where the community was asked to mark their pedestrian and road safety issues on a map of Southbank. A total of 1160 comments were received on the map.


Comments from the community fitted into five key themes:
  • 722 comments about “pedestrian issues”, including poorly maintained footpaths, obstructions on footpaths, dangerous intersections, requests for pedestrian crossings and insufficient green time at pedestrian crossings.
  • 307 comments about “cyclist safety issues”, including requests for dedicated bike lanes, vehicles obstructing bike lanes, unclear signage or line markings and dangerous intersections for cyclists.
  • 149 comments about “poor driver behaviour”, including speeding, drivers running red lights, drivers ignoring pedestrian crossings and drivers failing to stop for passengers alighting trams.
  • 98 comments about “vehicle safety issues”, including unclear signage or line markings, observations of crashes or near misses that may have gone unreported, poor visibility or inadequate sight lines for drivers.
  • 26 comments about “street lighting issues”, including inadequate lighting for pedestrians at night and explicit requests for the installation of strengths.

The transport engineering consultants used these community comments alongside historical community feedback, crash stats, and vehicle speed and volume data to come up with a list proposed pedestrian improvement projects for the neighbourhood. The details of these proposed projects will be shared later this year and the community will be asked to provide feedback.

Please follow Improving road safety and walkability in Southbank to ensure you can have your say in our next round of consultation.