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Anzac Station is located directly under St Kilda Road, near the intersection of Albert and Domain Road. The station has four entrances:
– On the outer edge of the Shrine of Remembrance Reserve
– Albert Road Reserve
– Two entrances at the new Domain train/tram interchange directly above the station on St Kilda Road

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Barerarerungar by Maree Clarke is a vibrant 45-metre-long installation that will line the Federation Square entrance to Town Hall Station, made up of 30 glass panels.
The work weaves together the cultural and ecological narratives of the 5 clans of the eastern Kulin Nations through photographic landscapes and features significant scar trees and intricate line drawings inspired by traditional possum skin cloak designs.
Created in close consultation with Elders and Traditional Owners, Barerarerungar acknowledges the traditional tanderrum ceremonies once held at the Town Hall Station site and celebrates the continued Aboriginal connection to land and the practice of culture.
Maree has worked with other artists on the artwork, which includes photography by Lucy Foster and Daryl Fleay, and line drawings by artist Mitch Mahoney.
Additionally, Maree Clarke, has created Tracks – a line-wide artwork that spans all 5 stations. Clarke’s artwork showcases native fauna found across the traditional lands and waters of the 5 Kulin Nation clans – Wadawurrung, Dja Dja Wurrung, Taungurung, Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung, and Bunurong / Boonwurrung. Maree’s artwork comprises large scale floor mosaics created from coloured granite. The granite was cut using a waterjet, with each piece finished and assembled by hand. There are a total of 35 footprints featured across the 5 station platforms.
The footprints at each station have been chosen by the artist from native animals (living and extinct) found in the different natural habitats across Kulin Nation Country, which includes Greater Melbourne and parts of south-central Victoria.
The new City Square above the station features designs which were developed in consultation with Wurundjeri Elders. The square has a permanent bronze smoking ceremony dish and gathering area, co-designed with Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Elder Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin. Woi-wurrung language and designs developed by Wurundjeri artist Lewis Wandin-Bursill are etched on terraces and seating throughout the Square.
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Town Hall Station’s main concourse below City Square is a grand entrance hall with a roof supported by huge columns shaped like tree branches. The station’s platforms are more than 25m below street level and 18m wide – among the widest underground metro platforms in the world. A spectacular 10m-high arched ceiling above the platforms features chandelier lights designed and made in Melbourne. City Square Melbourne’s City Square has been given a major facelift as part of the Metro Tunnel Project but has retained some icons too. The square is full of native flora species such as gum trees, correas, daisies and native grasses. An interactive, digital version of the Mockridge fountain – titled Mnemonic Flow – feature on the Collins Street side of the square, while the bronze sculpture Beyond the Ocean of Existence has also returned to the area.
Visit transport.vic.gov.au to plan your trip

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