East of the station is the bus interchange with fourteen stands, and north-east is a car park[4][7] with 923 bays.
The land is privately owned by the Yanchep Beach Joint Venture and is intended to become a transit-oriented development.
[5] On the retaining walls at platform level is a painted mural by Jack Bromell, depicting local flora and fauna with poetry interspersed.
The mural's colours come from Yanchep's reefs, lagoon, limestone cliffs, Banksia forests, wetlands and tuart trees.
On the interior ceiling is an aluminium art piece by Penelope Forlano representing "stalactites and the natural forces shaping the local environment including wetlands, lagoons, and caves".
On the underside of the entrance's shade canopies are paintings by Buffie Punch representing native fauna and flora such as bulrushes.
[21] In December 2019, the main contract for the Yanchep Rail Extension and the Thornlie–Cockburn Link was awarded to the NEWest Alliance, a joint venture of CPB Contractors and Downer Group.
[24] In June 2021, PerthNow reported that construction on the Yanchep Rail Extension had "stalled".
The first priority was building the 150-metre-long (490 ft) concrete retaining walls,[26][27] which were completed by May 2022.
[32] The Yanchep Rail Extension was originally meant to open in late 2021.
[33][34][35] After the May 2023 state budget, the government said that the Yanchep extension "is due for completion at the end of 2023, with services commencing in the new year".
[36] At the end of 2023, the Yanchep extension was still under construction and services were planned to commence in the first half of 2024.
[39][40] The station was officially opened on 14 July 2024 by Premier Roger Cook and Transport Minister Rita Saffioti.