Short history of the Queenscliff-Sorrento ferry

For visitors to the towns of Queenscliff and Sorrento on the shores of Port Phillip Bay in Victoria, the car ferry that links the two is a familiar sight.

MV Queenscliff crosses the bay, Pope's Eye and Chinaman's Hat in the background

Today marks the 24th anniversary of the first sailing of the service by Peninsula Searoad Transport, on the morning of September 19th, 1987. Today known as Searoad Ferries (they shortened their name in early 2011) the current pair of ferries carry over 110,000 cars and 600,000 passengers each year on the 40 minute, 5.6 nautical mile (10.3 kilometre) crossing of the bay, cutting the distance between the Bellarine and Mornington Peninsulas.

The ferry used in the early days of the service was the Peninsula Princess, a $2 million roll-on/roll-off vessel with a 35 car capacity built new for the company in Newcastle, NSW.

Long time no see, 'Peninsula Princess'

With this single ferry a 45 minute service could be provided between the peninsulas, with tight turnarounds during the summer sailing season allowing nine return trips to be made across the bay between the hours of 7am and 7.45pm. So how did the fares compare?

1987 timetable and fares for the Queenscliff - Sorrento ferry

Back in 1987 the one way fare for a car was $25, with foot passengers charged $5. Looking at the current fares, a car is $54 with foot passengers charged $10. Given petrol has risen from 52 cents/litre in 1987 to around 130 cents/litre today, it isn’t that bad a deal!

As for the patronage on the ferry, over the next five years Peninsula Princess went on to make over 22,000 crossings of the bay, when continued growth required her replacement by a larger vessel.

This new vessel was the $5 million MV Queenscliff: she entered service in December 1993 and still operates today, albeit internally refurbished. With a much larger 80-car, 700 passenger capacity, the Queenscliff also had a much larger passenger saloon on the upper decks to cater for the increasing market of sightseers travelling without cars.

Nice and sunny on the MV Sorrento upper deck

As well as a bigger ferry, improvements were also made to the ferry terminals at both wharves to cater for the larger number of passengers: the waiting room at Sorrento Pier opened in April 1992 with vehicle queuing area being expanded in 1995, while a transit lounge opened at Queenscliff in January 1990 and was expanded to the current size building and cafe in December 1993.

Overview of the Queenscliff ferry terminal, with MV Queenscliff arriving

Over the next few years patronage continued to climb, so a sister ship to the Queenscliff was built. Named MV Sorrento and costing $12 million, she entered service in March 2001 and allowed an hourly ferry service to operate between Queenscliff and Sorrento. Whilst she is the same size as her older sister, the Sorrento received a more upmarket interior fitout for the enjoyment of passengers.

Passenger lounge of the MV Sorrento

The deck configuration of the two ships is the same: three main decks and a car loading ramp at each end, berthing bow first at Queenscliff, and stern first at Sorrento. The bow doors are the most complex of the pair, with the lower portion dropping down to form the car ramp, while the upper half moves upwards to provide enough clearance for tall vehicles.

Foot passengers board the ferry MV Sorrento at Queenscliff

By comparison the stern ramp is simply lowered onto the concrete wharf.

Stern end of MV Sorrento loading at Sorrento

The main car deck holds 56 cars, or a combination of 30 cars and 7 buses. Staircases to the upper levels are located at the bow and stern ends, as well as along the centreline.

Empty car deck of the MV Sorrento

A further 24 car spaces are provided by on the mezzanine deck, located above the main deck on the port side. Built in two separate sections and moved by hydraulic cylinders, the mezzanine deck is first lowered to enable cars to drive onto it (requiring the main deck beneath to be emptied first!) and then raised so the main deck below can also be loaded (the reverse applies to unload). Due to the time taken to operate the mechanism, the mezzanine is only used in peak periods when the extra capacity is needed.

Mezzanine car deck on the MV Sorrento

Above the car decks is the enclosed passenger saloon with seats, toilets, and a small cafe. The front and rear of this deck also has open viewing areas.

Passenger lounge of the MV Sorrento

Finally, the top deck has the wheelhouse and crew areas at the front, and an open sitting area to the rear.

Wheelhouse of car ferry MV Sorrento

Top deck of the MV Sorrento

Today MV Queenscliff and MV Sorrento continue to provide an hourly ferry service between the two peninsulas, with Queenscliff receiving an interior refit in 2011 to bring her up to the same standards of her younger sister. The new look will be launched at Melbourne Docklands on the weekend of September 24 and 25.

As for the older ferry Peninsula Princess, she occasionally stands in for either vessel when they visit dry dock during the winter off-season – but her story is one for another time…

Further reading

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10 Responses to “Short history of the Queenscliff-Sorrento ferry”

  1. […] on September 25, 2011 to launch the new corporate image of Searoad Ferries, the operator of the Queenscliff-Sorrento car ferry. She was refitted at a dry dock in Tasmania over the past few months, and sailed back to Melbourne […]

  2. mich says:

    There was a ferry there before 1987, I know that because I only caught it once…. on “Ash Wednesday” 1983. I was explaining the story of Harold Holt to some incredulous Germans, and I realised it was abnormally hot when I realised at 2 PM that I had already drunk 6 litres of Coke.

    • Marcus says:

      That would have been the smaller pedestrian-only ferry that used to do the run – operated by the Sorrento Ferry Company, in the later years the blue painted ferries ‘J.J. Farnsworth’ and ‘Nepean’ was used, the last run being in 2003.

      (I’ve got the subject sitting in my rather large ‘to blog’ pile)

      • Clive Robertson says:

        There were 2 boats before those….I remember the name of only one….the Katoomba….pretty sure of that…..and operated by the Farnsworth family…..fisherman from Sorrento

  3. […] while back I wrote about the history of the Queenscliff – Sorrento car ferry and the two very similar vessels that are used on the service – MV Queenscliff and MV […]

  4. […] previous written about the history of the Queenscliff-Sorrento car ferry, but today I’m looking at a different ferry service that plied the same route – the […]

  5. Clive Robertson says:

    I Remember the ferry service running way back in the 1950’s…..and I Remember the name of that Ferry….The Doo-Dah….I traveled on it a few times with my family when we holidayed at Sorrento
    I’m petty sure the name of the fellow who operated it was Fred Adams….he was a friend of my dad’s

  6. […] Where I found the Queenscliff-Sorrento car ferry. […]

  7. […] I also headed down the bay to see the Queenscliff-Sorrento ferry. […]

  8. […] Over the 2011-12 Christmas and New Year period Searoad Ferries was running a three vessel service between Queenscliff and Sorrento, so I headed down the peninsula for a ride on their original ferry – MV Peninsula Princess. […]

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