DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Bypass tree down

Bypass tree down

TRAGICALLY sad are the words Greater Dandenong mayor Peter Brown chose to describe the felling of a 400-year-old river red gum in Dandenong South this week.
But the large tree will now be carved up and given to council to use for souvenirs, furniture or construction.
A large river red gum tree until last week sat in the path of the under-construction Dandenong Southern Bypass, and as reported by Star last week, Greater Dandenong mayor Peter Brown has been lobbying to save it.
But this week construction firm Thiess John Holland told Star it had no choice but to remove the tree.
“Avoiding significant trees and vegetation has been a key objective of Thiess John Holland throughout the design of EastLink,” a spokesman said.
“In this instance, it is not possible to avoid this particular river red gum, which is directly in the path of the Dandenong Southern Bypass.”
Cr Brown told Star that its removal was ‘tragically sad’, but even if council had found a way to retain the tree, it was likely to lose a lot of its water supply once bypass works were completed.
“Even if we retained it, it would be in the middle of a large intersection and the other difficulty of course, it would be totally surrounded by bitumen,” he said.
“Particularly in summertime, it would not get adequate water and would suffer extreme heat stress from the radiated heat off the pavement.”
Cr Brown said Thiess John Holland had arranged with council to give it the tree once it was pulled down, to be used for a project at council’s discretion.
Thiess John Holland said it was planting 500,000 trees along EastLink’s roadside, including 250,000 river red gums.
“These river red gums have been propagated from seeds collected early in the project by Greening Australia,” the spokesman said.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Titans cause dramatic upset…but it’s not enough

    Titans cause dramatic upset…but it’s not enough

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528963 Berwick Springs needed an outright victory against Keysborough to keep its season alive and the Titans almost got the job done. They won…

  • Cobras convincing as new MDL season rolls around

    Cobras convincing as new MDL season rolls around

    Dartboards have been illuminated for the first time in 2026 with an exciting new season of the Mountain Dart League kicking off on Friday night. In Division 1, the big…

  • Scientist eyes clean hydrogen future

    Scientist eyes clean hydrogen future

    A Noble Park scientist who is forging world-first hydrogen-energy technology has been awarded City of Greater Dandenong’s Sustainability Award. Suraj Loomba, who arrived in Australia on a student visa in…

  • Rates arrears drop as flexible approach pays off

    Rates arrears drop as flexible approach pays off

    Greater Dandenong Council says it’s bucking the trend with fewer ratepayers in arrears. This is despite more ratepayers are doing it tough – with 134 applying for hardship relief as…

  • EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 228738 The state’s pollution watchdog says it remains opposed to a new toxic-waste cell at a controversial hazardous-waste landfill at Taylors Road, Lyndhurst. In…