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Patterson railway station

Railway stations in Australia opened in 1961Railway stations in MelbourneRailway stations in the City of Glen EiraUse Australian English from February 2015
Patterson Railway station
Patterson Railway station

Patterson railway station is located on the Frankston line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the south-eastern Melbourne suburb of Bentleigh, and it opened on 28 May 1961.Named after Patterson Road, which is located immediately south of the station and also provides access, construction of the station commenced in 1958.From its opening, provision was made for another platform face on the western side of the station. On 28 June 1987, it came into use, when a third track was provided between Caulfield and Moorabbin.On 17 December 1994, a deliberately lit fire damaged parts of the station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Patterson railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Patterson railway station
North Avenue, Melbourne Bentleigh

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -37.9248 ° E 145.0354 °
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Address

North Avenue 49
3204 Melbourne, Bentleigh
Victoria, Australia
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Patterson Railway station
Patterson Railway station
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Electoral district of Bentleigh
Electoral district of Bentleigh

The electoral district of Bentleigh is an electoral district of the Victorian Legislative Assembly. It covers an area of 25 square kilometres (9.7 sq mi) in southern Melbourne, including the suburbs of Bentleigh, Hampton East, McKinnon, and Moorabbin, and parts of Bentleigh East, Brighton East and Ormond. It also includes the Moorabbin campus of the Monash Medical Centre. It lies within the Southern Metropolitan Region of the upper house, the Legislative Council.Bentleigh has usually been seen as a key marginal seat, lying at the 'point of the pendulum' needed to change government. It is considered a bellwether seat in Victoria, having elected a member of the governing party in all but two elections of its existence. It was created in 1967 as a fairly safe Liberal seat during the height of the Victorian Liberals' popularity. It remained in Liberal hands until 1979 where the Liberals nearly lost their majority for the first time in just under three decades. For most of the time since then, it has been a marginal seat, and is part of the belt of marginal seats in eastern Melbourne that usually decide elections in Victoria. Labor then held the seat until the Kennett landslide of 1992. Following this, the seat was narrowly held by Inga Peulich until she was tipped out of office by Rob Hudson in the 2002 election. In the 2010 election the seat returned to the Liberals with Elizabeth Miller narrowly defeating Hudson. Bentleigh was actually the last seat to be decided, and Miller's victory allowed the Coalition to form government by one seat. In turn, Miller was ousted by Labor candidate Nick Staikos at the 2014 election. Staikos picked up a hefty swing of over 11 percent in Labor's landslide victory of 2018 and now sits on a majority of 61.9 percent, easily the strongest result for Labor in the seat's history.