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The renewed debate is timely. It was this week 27 years ago - long before Charles and Diana did the official honours - that Melbourne City Council closed Bourke Street. That first closure was done without fanfare, and as a trial.
Bourke Street was not the first choice - that was Collins Street - but trader uproar forced the council to look for an alternative. There were certainly doomsayers. The management of the former Buckley and Nunn, the current David Jones store, feared the worst.
Melburnians, however, got used to the idea, despite having to wait until 1984 for anything like landscaping to take place. The retailers liked it, and it provided a new performance space.
But Melbourne University historian Andrew Brown-May believes Melburnians have never embraced the mall as a place to spend time.
"From an historical point of view, it is a bit of an odd fish, really," he says. Being a "transit mall" - in effect, a giant tram station, split by one of the busiest city routes - is "its blessing and its curse".
"Although it has the advantage of bringing people in ... it means that it's never been a true pedestrian space."
Brown-May says that although much can be done to obliterate the memory of Bourke Street being a former main road, "it's still a pretty scary place for a pedestrian".
Buckland puts a first-hand spin on the same idea.
"I've seen numerous near misses, I've seen trams going twice the speed they should be, I've helped someone that was almost crushed to death" .
He says that tourists in particular, among the mall's big users, are oblivious to the danger.
"The trams should have been diverted many years ago," Buckland says.
The tram question has come up repeatedly. A 1984 plan put forward several ideas, among them putting the trams underground, moving the tram line to Lonsdale Street, and breaking the Bourke Street line at Swanston and Elizabeth streets.
More recently, council election candidates have put forward similar ideas. Nothing so radical is part of the current plans, although moving the two tram stops in April is expected to free up the crowded Swanston Street end of the mall.
Lord mayor John So is typically upbeat. He says the paving and the tram stop changes will make the mall safer. He believes trams bring people into the city heart, and are part of its flavour. "They are an asset," he says.
Driving the mall redevelopment is the need to adapt to the increased number of people coming into the city each day - 50 per cent more than a decade ago.
"I want to turn the mall into a space that embraces diverse activities, including the uniqueness of the trams running through it," Cr So says. [...]