Sydney bids farewell to 'white elephant' monorail
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Sydney will Sunday bid farewell to what has been termed a transport "white elephant" -- a monorail which has looped the centre of the Australian city for almost a quarter of a century.
The New South Wales state government announced in March that the controversial above-ground rail link would be pulled down.
"I think at the time there wasn't enough planning gone into it," the state's transport minister Gladys Berejiklian said on Friday.
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"I think history has proven on the monorail project that unless you get the planning right, you do risk creating these white elephants."
Berejiklian said the monorail -- which essentially connected the convention and tourism precinct of Darling Harbour to the central business district -- "did not look right" in Sydney.
Frank Sartor, who was a city councillor when the monorail was first built, said he had always hated it.
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"It's aesthetic mainly -- I mean, it interrupts the streetscapes of Sydney," he told the ABC.
"It didn't serve particularly well as a transport system, although some people that live locally, they like it and it works for them."
The government has encouraged people to enjoy a final ride on the monorail over the weekend, with all proceeds from ticket sales going to charity. The final loop was set to take place at 9:30 pm (1130 GMT).
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The ageing monorail, which would have been too costly for the government to upgrade to keep in operation, will be replaced by light rail service.