Station Architecture: Side Tracks, Off-Ramps, and the MMC Modular Kit

How trains stop on the SBC corridor without blocking through traffic. One unifying principle, applied at two scales (freight ramps and maglev side tracks), built from one modular precast kit. The pylon shape that embodies the MMC logo carries the entire continental corridor.

Memo11 — Stations and Ramps
AuthorBrett Murrell
Versionv1.0
Date11 May 2026
ScopeArchitecture survey — engineering brief
Word count~5,000
The SBC corridor moves continental-scale freight and 600 km/h passenger maglev on the same elevated structure. At every corridor town there is a question that must be answered honestly: how do trains stop without blocking through traffic? This memo locks the architectural answer. Stopping trains use side tracks; main alignments run corridor speed without interruption. Freight descends from the elevated viaduct to a ground-level terminal via a dedicated off-ramp, while three through tracks above remain clear. Passenger maglev stopping services move onto a side guideway on the same upper deck while express services bypass at full speed on the main guideway. The two systems share one structural form — a two-legged pylon at 25 m spacing that physically embodies the MMC logo — and one modular precast kit. Switch speed is the engineering scaling variable that determines side track length and corridor capacity; corridor-specific frequency design lets each corridor section be built at the right intensity for its demand. The architecture aligns with international HSR best practice, accommodates current commercial maglev switching technology, and leaves clear upgrade paths as switching and DC tap technology mature.
25 mStandard pylon spacing along corridor
4-trackMaglev deck width from day one
~200 km/hCurrent commercial maglev switch diverging speed
~27 minNewcastle–Sydney with 2 stops (80% faster than current)

1. What This Memo Does

At 600 km/h on the maglev deck and 250 km/h on the freight deck below, a train that stops in the wrong place is a catastrophe. Every passenger train behind it has its journey blocked. Every freight train behind it has its schedule disrupted. The corridor’s value collapses if stopping trains share infrastructure with through traffic at the wrong points.

This is not a new problem. Every high-speed railway in the world has solved it. The solutions are mature, operationally proven, and consistent across jurisdictions. The SBC architecture adopts the same principle, refined for the specific case of a continental multimodal corridor carrying both heavy freight and 600 km/h maglev.

This memo sets out the architectural answer. The principle is simple and non-negotiable: stopping trains use side tracks; main alignments run corridor speed without interruption. The implementation has been worked through for both modes — freight ramps descending to ground-level terminals, maglev side guideways on the upper deck — and the structural form that carries both is the standard MMC pylon-and-beam kit at 25 m spacing.

This memo locks the architectural principle. The detailed engineering (precise switch geometry, side track sizing per station, platform configuration, signalling design) is for chartered rail experts to take forward against detailed service specifications. The brief in this memo is precise enough for that work to begin.

2. The Architectural Principle

2.1 Stopping trains do not occupy main alignments

The SBC corridor commits to this principle without qualification. At every station that hosts a stopping service, the train switches off the main alignment onto a side track, decelerates and operates there, and re-joins the main alignment when ready to continue. The main alignment carries through traffic at corridor speed throughout this sequence, undisturbed.

This is how Shinkansen operates at every intermediate station on the Tokaido and other lines — Kodama all-stops services pull onto platform tracks while Nozomi express services pass through on the main running line at full speed. It is how TGV operates at intermediate stations on the LGV, with dedicated bypass tracks running outside platform tracks. It is how China’s HSR network operates at thousands of stations across the busiest high-speed rail system in the world. The SBC architecture follows the same operational principle, scaled and adapted for 600 km/h maglev rather than 350 km/h conventional HSR.

2.2 The same principle applied at two scales

The principle applies to both modes carried on the SBC viaduct, at different scales and with different implementations:

ModeMain alignmentStopping infrastructureWhere the stop happens
Freight (lower deck)3 through tracks (south / middle / north) running corridor speed uninterruptedDedicated descending off-ramp from a through track to ground levelGround-level terminal yard, separated from the viaduct
Maglev (upper deck)2 main guideways (one each direction) running 600 km/h uninterruptedSide guideway on the 4-track-capable upper deck, accessed via switchPlatform on the side guideway, alongside the main alignment

The same architectural logic, applied at two physical scales. Freight stops at ground level (via descent) because freight handling is ground-level work — container cranes, road interface, warehousing. Maglev stops on the upper deck (via side guideway) because passenger boarding belongs at the same level as the running line. Both modes use side infrastructure to absorb stops; both modes keep main alignments clear.

3. The Structural Form — The MMC Pylon

3.1 Two-legged frame, embodiment of the logo

The MMC pylon is a two-legged frame. Two columns rise from foundations, joined at the top by a transverse beam, like an inverted U or the Greek letter П. Not coincidentally, this is the form of the MMC logo. The structural archetype came first and the visual identity is honest about what it represents: the corridor IS the logo, repeated every 25 m across thousands of kilometres of Australia.

The form is fundamentally strong. Vertical loads from both decks descend through the two legs to two foundations. The freight deck sits between the legs, supported on a transverse cross-beam at the freight level. The maglev deck sits on top of the upper transverse beam as a flat roof-like platform, cantilevering outward beyond each leg via extended transverse beam ends.

3.2 Locked dimensions

ElementDimensionNotes
Longitudinal pylon spacing25 mStandard precast concrete beam span; modern precast bridge beams routinely span 30–40 m, so 25 m gives structural margin
Transverse leg spacing~17 mAccommodates 3-track freight deck between the legs
Lower freight deck width~17 m3 tracks at standard heavy-rail centre-to-centre, plus margins and walkways
Upper maglev deck width~22–24 m4-track maglev capable; cantilevers ~2–3 m beyond each pylon leg via extended transverse beam
Standard corridor height above flat ground6–8 mClearance for road traffic, livestock, watercourses underneath; not unnecessarily tall
Pylons per 2,500 km corridor~100,000The Megafactory architecture (Patent 1) is dimensioned for this scale of repetitive precast production

3.3 One form, one supply chain, one corridor

The same pylon repeats along the entire corridor. Same precast modules, same foundation design, same drilling rig, same construction crew. Stations do not require special pylons or special widening — the standard pylon already accommodates the 4-track maglev capability and the 3-track freight deck by default. What changes at stations is the configuration of what is laid on the standard deck, not the structure beneath.

This is the productised-vs-bespoke discipline of the MMC platform, expressed at the level of station architecture. Conventional rail and HSR systems treat every station as a custom design exercise. The SBC architecture treats every station as a standard configuration of a continental product family. The factory produces one pylon; the corridor accepts it at every km.

4. The Maglev Deck — 4-Track Width from Day One

4.1 The locked configuration

The upper maglev deck is built with capacity for four guideways across its full width, the entire length of the corridor. This is not a future upgrade. It is the standard MMC deck specification from day one. The corridor does not need to be rebuilt or widened to accept stations; the stations are already accommodated by the standard deck width.

The four-track capability is configured as follows along the corridor:

The deck does not change. The use of the deck changes. Side lines at stations are not structural additions; they are simply guideway laid on existing deck width. No cantilever overhangs, no widening, no special station structures.

4.2 Why 4-track width from day one

The corridor is a 30–50 year asset. Decisions about deck width are decisions about the network’s maximum capacity for the rest of the century. Building a 2-track deck and retrofitting wider would require structural modifications to thousands of kilometres of viaduct — in practice, impossible without taking the corridor out of service. Building 4-track width from day one is a modest premium on standard deck material (the underlying pylons are the same; only the transverse beam length and deck panel count grow) but preserves all future capacity options.

The principle is design for 2070, not 2030. The Melbourne–Brisbane corridor will, in the lifetime of the asset, see service frequencies that match what the busiest air routes in the world currently support (Sydney–Melbourne is one of those routes today). Asia–Australia tourism, the eastern Australian population growth corridor, air-travel substitution — all of these point to high-frequency demand within a few decades. The corridor must be built to absorb that.

5. The Freight Deck — Three Through Tracks and Dedicated Ramps

5.1 Three through tracks

The lower freight deck carries three through tracks: a southbound track (Track 1), a middle track (Track 2), and a northbound track (Track 3). All three run corridor speed (up to 250 km/h for modern electric freight) without interruption.

The middle track is for direction switching (a train transferring between northbound and southbound running), high-speed overtakes (a faster train passing a slower one), and maintenance bypass (when one of the outer tracks is closed). It is never used as a deceleration lane for terminal-bound trains; that work happens on the dedicated off-ramp, not on the main alignment.

5.2 Direct switch to dedicated off-ramp

A train approaching a freight terminal switches directly off its through track onto a dedicated descending off-ramp — a separate rail line, structurally distinct from the through alignment, that descends to the ground-level terminal yard. The through track stays clear; following trains pass at corridor speed without interruption.

The off-ramp does two jobs at once: it descends from the viaduct height to ground level, and it provides the deceleration zone for the train arriving at the terminal. Modern electric freight handles 3–4 % sustained gradient under power — routine on heavy-haul electric corridors in Switzerland, Norway, and China. At those gradients on a 6–8 m corridor height, the ramp length is approximately 200–265 m per direction.

5.3 Ground engineering at terminals

The viaduct does not maintain its standard 6–8 m above-ground height at terminal locations. Two design moves combine to reduce the actual ramp vertical span dramatically:

Net result: the actual ramp vertical span at the terminal is approximately 3–5 m rather than 6–8 m. At 3 % gradient, ramp length drops to approximately 100–170 m. Terminal ramps are modest structures, not long ones.

5.4 Terminal layout

The freight terminal sits at ground level, separated from the viaduct alignment. The viaduct overhead remains clear airspace. The terminal yard has proper ground-level footprint for container handling, road access, warehousing, and conventional intermodal equipment.

Ramp handedness: southbound trains branch left from Track 1 onto a left-side off-ramp; northbound trains branch right from Track 3 onto a right-side off-ramp. Each direction has its own dedicated off-ramp and on-ramp pair, on its own side of the corridor. No direction crossings.

5.5 Every corridor town gets a freight terminal

The SBC commits to a freight terminal at every corridor town at the standard ~100 km spacing. This is a significant commitment with substantial economic implications. A standard freight terminal at every 100 km transforms each corridor town from a passenger stop into an economic node — the gateway for the region’s agricultural and industrial output to enter the electric freight system.

The cost is justified by the modular discipline. Each terminal is not a bespoke megaproject; it is the standard MMC ramp-and-yard kit applied at the local scale. The Megafactory produces the components; the foundation drilling system installs them; the construction crew assembles them. ~35 freight terminals on a 2,500 km corridor is exactly the operational logistical density of a normal industrial rail network, not an excess.

6. Switch Speed — The Engineering Scaling Variable

6.1 The trade-off

The fundamental engineering decision for any stopping station is the speed at which a train can take the diverging path through the switch from main alignment to side track. This single variable determines almost everything about the side track architecture and the achievable corridor capacity.

The faster the switch, the longer the side track must be to absorb deceleration after the switch, and the shorter the deceleration zone on the main alignment before the switch. The slower the switch, the shorter the side track can be, but the longer the main alignment is shared with a decelerating train before the switch — which reduces achievable frequency on the main alignment.

The trade-off is real on both sides. Faster switches favour short total deceleration zones and high corridor frequency, but require long side tracks and complex switch mechanisms. Slower switches favour short side tracks and simple mechanisms, but reduce corridor frequency and impose long “slow train ahead” zones on the main alignment.

6.2 Three implementation ranges

Switch speedSide track lengthTrade-offBest application
Slow (~50 km/h)~500 m to 1 kmMost deceleration on main alignment (~14 km of slow train approaching); simpler/cheaper switch mechanism; reduced corridor frequencyLow-frequency corridors, small stops, baseline implementation
Medium (~100–200 km/h)~3–5 kmBalanced deceleration (~6–8 km on main, ~2–3 km on side); current commercial maglev capability (Shanghai Transrapid operates at ~200 km/h on diverging path)Medium-to-high-frequency corridors; most stopping stations on busy lines
Fast (~300+ km/h)~7–10 kmMain alignment largely protected; very high corridor frequency capacity; not yet operationally proven; long side track infrastructureHighest-frequency sections only; future upgrade as switching technology matures

6.3 The architectural commitment does not depend on the choice

This is the important framing: the SBC architectural commitment (stopping trains use side tracks; main alignments run corridor speed uninterrupted) is preserved at any switch speed in the 50–300 km/h range. The choice between slow, medium, and fast switches is implementation engineering — it determines side track length and capacity, but it does not affect the architectural principle.

This matters because switch technology will evolve over the 30–50 year life of the corridor. The SBC can deploy medium-switch infrastructure (current commercial capability) at Phase 1 and upgrade to fast-switch infrastructure at busy stations later, without rebuilding the corridor. The architectural commitment absorbs that evolution.

7. Corridor-Specific Frequency Design

7.1 Not all corridors need the same intensity

The SBC network spans corridors with very different demand profiles. Melbourne–Brisbane runs through 13 million people on the most economically active part of Australia. Brisbane–Perth runs through 3,500 km of sparsely-populated continental interior with a handful of mining and pastoral towns along the route. Building both to the same infrastructure intensity wastes capital on the long corridor and constrains capacity on the busy one.

The SBC architecture answers this by varying infrastructure intensity per corridor and per station, using the same MMC modular kit at different configurations.

7.2 Melbourne–Brisbane — the high-frequency corridor

Designed for 6–15 maglev movements per hour per direction at peak future operations. Medium-to-fast switches at every stopping station. Full passing infrastructure with 3–5 km side tracks. Possibly 3-track maglev architecture in the busiest sections (Sydney–Newcastle, Melbourne–Albury commuter zone). Frequent local shuttles between adjacent major cities. Service tiers genuinely populated: 3–4 direct expresses per day plus 1–2 limited stopping services plus high-frequency local shuttles in each segment.

The capital intensity per kilometre is higher than other corridors, but it is justified by the demand. This is the corridor that displaces a substantial share of Australian air travel. The infrastructure has to be there from day one because passenger volume cannot be retrofitted into a corridor that cannot carry it.

7.3 Brisbane–Perth — the long-distance corridor

Designed for 1–3 maglev movements per hour per direction. Slower switches at most stops (50–100 km/h). Shorter side tracks (~500 m to 1 km). Service mix tilted toward direct express and long-distance limited stopping rather than local shuttles — the corridor towns are too far apart for high-frequency local services to be useful.

Capital intensity per kilometre is significantly lower than Melbourne–Brisbane. The savings on switching infrastructure across 3,500 km of corridor are substantial — on the order of hundreds of millions of dollars compared to building everything to the higher specification.

7.4 Station-scale variation within a corridor

The same logic applies at the station level. A major city station (Toowoomba, Bendigo) has full passing-loop architecture with multiple side guideways, medium-to-fast switches, longer side tracks. A mid-sized corridor town (Wagga, Tamworth) has standard passing infrastructure, medium switches, 3–5 km side tracks. A small remote stop (Echuca, Warwick) has minimal infrastructure — slow switches, ~500 m side tracks, a single platform pair.

All built from the same MMC modular kit. Same precast components, same pylon, same foundation system. Configuration varies; the kit does not.

8. Worked Example — Newcastle to Sydney

The Phase 0-2 Newcastle–Sydney corridor (142 km, direct passenger maglev only) is a useful worked example because it spans the SBC’s typical commuter-corridor length and demonstrates the timing implications of the architecture.

8.1 Direct express

The direct express service runs Newcastle to Sydney without intermediate stops. Acceleration from rest to 600 km/h takes approximately 2.5 minutes and 14 km. Deceleration from 600 km/h to rest at Sydney takes approximately 2.5 minutes and 14 km. The 114 km of cruise between acceleration and deceleration takes approximately 11.4 minutes at 600 km/h.

Total direct journey time: approximately 17–18 minutes. This is the corrected figure including realistic acceleration and deceleration physics. The earlier 15-minute figure used in some campaign material assumed sustained 600 km/h end to end — physically not achievable on a 142 km corridor.

8.2 Stopping service with two intermediate stops

Add two intermediate stops at corridor towns along the Newcastle–Sydney alignment. With medium-switch infrastructure (~200 km/h diverging path, 3–5 km side track), each stop adds approximately 5 minutes to the journey time:

PhaseDistanceTime
Deceleration on main from 600 to 200 km/h before switch~6–8 km~80–90 seconds
Deceleration on side track from 200 to 0 km/h~2–3 km~30–40 seconds
Platform dwell0 m~60 seconds
Acceleration on side track from 0 to 200 km/h~2–3 km~30–40 seconds
Acceleration on main from 200 to 600 km/h after switch~6–8 km~80–90 seconds
Total per stop~16–22 km~5 minutes

With 2 stops, total journey time becomes approximately 27 minutes (17–18 minutes direct plus 2 × 5 minutes per stop). For context: the current Sydney–Newcastle drive is approximately 2.5 hours in moderate traffic. The current train via the Central Coast is longer. The maglev stopping service is roughly 80 % faster than current alternatives, even with two intermediate stops.

8.3 The implication for service design

Stops are not free in journey time, but they are cheap on this architecture. ~5 minutes per stop is a manageable cost for the benefit of serving an intermediate town. A stopping service with 4–6 stops Melbourne–Brisbane (~1,650 km Phase 0 corridor) would run approximately 5–5.5 hours including all stops, versus approximately 3 hours 50 minutes direct express. Both are radically faster than alternatives.

9. Operational Capacity

9.1 Daily train capacity as the central metric

The corridor’s capacity is a function of minimum operational headway. With realistic operational headway of 7 minutes between consecutive trains in one direction, the theoretical maximum is approximately 205 movements per direction per day. Realistic capacity accounts for maintenance windows (4–6 hours overnight closure), schedule clustering, and reserve margin for delays; realistic deployable capacity is 50–70 % of theoretical maximum.

At 7-minute headway realistic, the SBC corridor accommodates approximately 100–145 movements per direction per day. This includes all service tiers combined — expresses, limited stopping, and local shuttles.

9.2 The service mix comfortably fits

The proposed SBC service mix for a high-frequency corridor like Melbourne–Brisbane:

Total long-distance and limited movements: ~5–6 per direction per day. Local shuttle movements: scaled to segment length and demand — possibly 20–30 movements per direction per day on the busiest segments (Sydney–Newcastle, Sydney–Wollongong-class density). Total combined: typically 25–40 movements per direction per day on the busiest sections — well within the 100–145 capacity ceiling.

9.3 Demand is the constraint, not infrastructure

This is the strategic claim that justifies the capital investment. The SBC corridor is not capacity-limited at any realistic medium-term service level. Demand can grow substantially before the architecture needs revisiting. Add expresses as air-travel substitution demand grows. Expand local shuttle frequency as corridor towns grow. Add limited-stopping services as inter-regional patronage develops. The infrastructure absorbs all of this without rebuilding.

10. Service Tier Architecture

The combination of 4-track-capable maglev deck, side tracks at stations, and the deceleration physics produces a natural three-tier service architecture. The tiers are not artificially imposed; they emerge from the architecture itself.

TierStopsApproximate journey timeFrequencyInfrastructure used
Direct express0 intermediate (origin and destination only)Mel–Bri ~3h 50min; Syd–Bri ~1h 35min; Newcastle–Sydney ~17–18min3–4 per day each directionMain guideway only; never enters a side track
Limited stopping4–6 major corridor citiesMel–Bri ~5–5.5h; Syd–Bri ~2–2.5h1–2 per day each directionMain guideway for cruise; side tracks at major stations only
Local shuttleEvery corridor town in a defined segmentSegment-dependentEvery 30–60 minutes per segmentMain guideway plus side tracks at every stopping station in segment

The architecture allows all three tiers to run simultaneously on the same 2 main guideways, with stopping services yielding to expresses at passing-track stations via Shinkansen-style scheduling. The express choreography stages departures so an express catches up to a stopping service exactly at a passing-track station — the stopping train is already on the side line when the express arrives, the express passes at 600 km/h on the main guideway, and the stopping train re-enters the main after the express has cleared.

11. International Precedents

The architecture proposed in this memo is not novel in principle. It applies international high-speed rail best practice, adapted for the specific case of 600 km/h maglev on a continental multimodal corridor.

11.1 Shinkansen (Japan)

Operates a three-tier service architecture (Nozomi express, Hikari semi-fast, Kodama all-stops) on the Tokaido and other lines. At intermediate stations, the Kodama service uses platform tracks separated from the main running line. Nozomi expresses pass through the station at full speed (~285 km/h) on the main running line while the Kodama is held at the platform. Multiple Shinkansen lines have operated this architecture continuously since 1964, carrying billions of passenger journeys.

11.2 TGV / LGV (France)

French LGV lines run primarily as dedicated high-speed corridors with minimal intermediate stops. At intermediate stations such as Lyon-Saint-Exupéry and Avignon TGV, the main running line and platform tracks are physically separated — through expresses pass through the station on dedicated bypass tracks at 200–250 km/h while platform trains are stopped at the platform. This is the strongest version of the “stopping trains never use main alignment” principle and is the closest analogue to the SBC architecture at intermediate stations.

11.3 China HSR

The Chinese HSR network operates at higher traffic densities than any other system in the world (Beijing–Shanghai HSR runs 3-minute headways during peak). At intermediate stations, the architecture is typically 4-6 tracks: 2 main running tracks plus 2-4 platform tracks for stopping services. Express through services pass at full speed on the main tracks; stopping services use the platform tracks. The infrastructure is built for that traffic density from the start.

11.4 Maglev systems

Shanghai Transrapid (operational since 2004) uses the Transrapid bending-beam switch technology. Switch actuation takes 30–60 seconds, and the maximum speed on the diverging path is approximately 200 km/h. The SBC architecture is designed around this commercial baseline. Japanese SCMaglev (Chuo Shinkansen under construction, design speed 505 km/h, opening 2034) and Chinese CRRC 600 km/h superconducting maglev (in development) will mature higher switch speeds; the SBC architecture accommodates that evolution without redesign.

12. Open Engineering Questions

This memo locks the architectural principle and the structural form. Several engineering questions remain open and are for chartered rail experts to detail against specific service requirements.

12.1 Maglev switching

12.2 Freight ramp engineering

12.3 Station structure and platforms

13. MMC-VB and the Future MMC-VB+ Variant

The current MMC-VB viaduct specification (published) provides 2 maglev tracks on the upper deck, sized for the Phase 0 corridor service profile. The 4-track maglev capability described in this memo is captured for a future MMC-VB+ variant rather than as a retrospective change to MMC-VB.

MMC-VB+ as flagged: same two-leg pylon at 25 m spacing as MMC-VB; same lower freight deck (3 tracks, ~17 m wide); wider upper maglev deck (~22–24 m for 4-track capability) via wider HB3 cap beam and additional HB4 maglev girders. The wider upper deck cantilevers ~2–3 m beyond each pylon leg via extended transverse beam ends.

MMC-VB+ deployment is flexible: continuously across whole corridor sections demanding high future frequency (Melbourne–Brisbane spine), or locally at stations only on a baseline MMC-VB corridor (transitioning from MMC-VB to MMC-VB+ for the station passing-track section via switches). Detailed MMC-VB+ engineering — cap beam sizing, girder count, foundation loading review, patent claim consistency, megafactory production impact — is for a future design session, not a retrospective change to published MMC-VB.

14. Assumptions and Caveats

AssumptionValue usedConfidenceNotes
Standard corridor height above flat ground6–8 mWorking assumptionSufficient for road traffic, livestock, watercourses; site-specific variation
Pylon spacing along corridor25 mHighWithin standard precast beam span capability; gives structural margin
Lower freight deck width~17 mHighAccommodates 3 tracks at standard heavy-rail centres
Upper maglev deck width~22–24 mMediumDepends on maglev technology selection (Transrapid vs SCMaglev vs CRRC); refinement needed
Modern electric freight gradient3–4 % sustainedHighEstablished by Swiss, Norwegian, Chinese heavy-haul electric corridors
Maglev deceleration rate (passenger comfort)~1.0–1.3 m/s²HighStandard HSR/maglev passenger comfort range
Current commercial maglev switch diverging speed~200 km/hHighShanghai Transrapid operational baseline
Minimum operational headway~7 minutesMediumOperational figure; technical minimum approximately 3–4 min; binding constraint TBD
Realistic capacity vs theoretical50–70 %MediumStandard ratio for operating HSR systems after maintenance windows, reserve margin
Newcastle–Sydney direct journey time~17–18 minHighCorrected from earlier 15-min figure; includes acceleration and deceleration physics

The dimensions and timings in this memo are pre-feasibility working figures. Detailed engineering by chartered rail experts will refine these against specific maglev technology selection, freight specifications, signalling architecture, and corridor service standards.

15. Next Steps