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National Highway 2 (India, old numbering)

Old National Highway 2 or Old NH 2, (currently National Highway 19) was a major National Highway in India, that connected the states of Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal. It constitutes a major portion of the historical Grand Trunk Road along with old NH 91 and old NH 1 in India. The highway connects national capital Delhi with Kolkata as well as important cities such as Faridabad, Mathura, Agra, Kanpur, Allahabad, Varanasi, Dhanbad, Asansol, Durgapur and Bardhaman.[1]

National Highway 2
Road map of India with National Highway 2 highlighted in solid blue color
Route information
Part of AH1
Length1,465 km (910 mi)
GQ: 1454 km (New Delhi – Kolkata)
NS: 253 km (New Delhi – Agra)
EW: 35 km (Barah – Kanpur)
Major junctions
West endNew Delhi
Major intersections
List
East endDankuni near Kolkata
Location
CountryIndia
StatesDelhi: 12 km, Haryana: 74 km, Uttar Pradesh: 752 km, Bihar: 202 km, Jharkhand: 190 km, West Bengal: 235 km. It is also part of AH1 of Asian Highway Network, that traverses from Japan to Turkey.
Primary
destinations
New Delhi, Faridabad, Agra, Etawah, Auraiya, Akbarpur, Panki, Barra, Kidwai Nagar, Kanpur, Chakeri, Rooma, Maharajpur, Sarsaul, Bindki, Fatehpur District, Khaga, Kaushambi, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mughalsarai, Mohania, Barhi, Panagarh, Palsit
Highway system
NH 1D NH 2A
A view of Delhi Faridabad Skyway, Delhi NCR
Durgapur Expressway, part of NH 2

Renumbering edit

This NH has been renumbered as NH 19 and NH 44 after renumbering of all national highways by Ministry of Road Transport and Highways in 2010 and the old NH 2 number has ceased to exist. Now Delhi to Agra stretch is part of NH 44 and Agra to Kolkata stretch is NH 19.[2]

Route and length edit

The road was the part of National Highway network of India, and it is officially listed as running over 1,465 km. The kilometer counts in each of the states were Delhi (12), Haryana (74), Uttar Pradesh (752), Bihar (202), Jharkhand (190), West Bengal (235).

In Haryana edit

NH 2 entered Haryana through Badarpur border at Delhi Faridabad Skyway in Faridabad. It ran parallel to the Faridabad corridor of Delhi Metro and passed through Palwal before entering Uttar Pradesh.

In Uttar Pradesh edit

 
NH-2, Khaga, Fatehpur district, Uttar Pradesh

(West–east alignment) The National Highway 2 entered Uttar Pradesh from Haryana in Mathura district, and a part of it is known as Mathura Road. Before Mathura it covers Palwal and Faridabad city in Haryana. After Mathura it reaches Agra which is about 200 km (120 mi) In Agra it covers about 16 km (9.9 mi). After leaving Agra it enters in Firozabad district and then Etawah where 15  km bypass of city is made. After leaving Etawah it enters Kanpur city where a 23 km (14 mi) and 12 lane Kanpur over-bridge has been built which is also one of the largest over-bridges in the Asia.[3] In Kanpur it covers industrial belts (Akbarpur-Maharajpur) around 60 km (37 mi) and then it reaches Fatehpur District and covers 16 km (9.9 mi) area of Fatehpur, then it reaches Allahabad via Kaushambi and covers 16 km (9.9 mi) in city then reachesVaranasi-Mughalsarai covers 15 km (9.3 mi) and thus leaves U.P. This national highway has given a new life to public transport in Northern India. The overbridges built in Agra, Kanpur, Fatehpur and Allahabad have reduced city traffic problems. Allahabad Bypass Expressway is also the country's longest bypass section.

In Bihar edit

(West–east alignment) The Bihar stretch of NH 2 starts from the bridge on the Karmanasa River that forms the border with Uttar Pradesh. NH 2 runs for 202 km in the state and then enters Jharkhand, between Dobhi and Chauparan, around Barachatti. In between it passes through Kaimur district. Mohania is the first major city on it. Also NH 30 is connected to In the city and leads to Patna city. The next city is Sasaram where there is the tomb of Great Emperor Sher Shah Suri. At Dehri- on-Son it crosses the wide expanse of the Son River over the Jawahar Setu. At Dobhi it meets the road to Gaya and Patna (NH 83). NH 98 from Patna to Daltonganj crosses NH 2 at Aurangabad.

In Jharkhand edit

(East–west alignment) The Jharkhand stretch of NH 2 extends from the bridge on the Barakar River on the Asansol-Nirsa bypass to around Barachatti, and runs for 190 kilometres (120 mi). Immediately after crossing into Jharkhand from West Bengal, NH2 meets the junction with the road on the north leading to Maithon and the road on the south leading to Panchet. NH 2 returns to old Grand Trunk Road at Nirsa. At Gobindpur NH 2 meets NH 32 leading to Dhanbad and Jamshedpur. At Topchanchi there is a picturesque lake, off NH2. Thereafter for a long stretch up to Isri the massive Parasnath Hills / Shikharji dominates on the northern side of NH 2. At Dumri, the road on the north leads to Madhuban and Giridih. The next important junction is Bagodar where NH 100 meets NH2. There is a road leading to Hazaribagh Road station. At Barhi is the crossing with NH31 and NH33. Between Chauparan and Dobhi, around Barachatti, NH 2 crosses over to Bihar. Much of the Jharkhand sector of NH 2 passes through an undulating area on Koderma plateau.

In West Bengal edit

(East–west alignment) The West Bengal end of NH 2 starts or terminates at Dankuni in the outskirts of Kolkata.[4] There is a 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) stretch to the Nivedita Bridge, and thereafter Belghoria Expressway links it to Barrackpur Trunk Road, and Jessore Road/ NH 34. Alternatively, Kolkata bound traffic takes the NH 6 at Dankuni and then follows the Kona Expressway/NH 117 and Vidyasagar Setu to enter Kolkata.

The four–lane West Bengal portion of NH 2 stretches from Barakar to Dankuni and the entire stretch is complete. The 65 kilometres (40 mi) Dankuni-Palsit stretch is also known as Durgapur Expressway. From Palsit to the outskirts of Asansol it follows the old Grand Trunk Road bypassing such towns as Saktigarh, Bardhaman and Raniganj but passes through Durgapur and Andal. The Palsit–Panagarh stretch is 64 kilometres (40 mi) and the Panagarh–Raniganj stretch is 42 kilometres (26 mi). At Panagarh Darjeeling Mor NH 2 meets Panagarh–Morgram Highway. In the outskirts of Asansol NH 2 leaves Grand Trunk Road. The latter passes through crowded areas of Asansol, Neamatpur, Kulti and Barakar in West Bengal and Chirkunda and Kumardhubi in Jharkhand. A bypass links the outskirts of Asansol with Nirsa, where the NH 2 gets back to Grand Trunk Road. The Raniganj–Barakar stretch is 33 kilometres (21 mi). The widened 120 kilometres (75 mi) Panagarh–Dhanbad stretch was thrown open to traffic in 2001.[5]

Construction cost of the 130 kilometres (81 mi) Panagarh–Dankuni section was 178 million US dollars.[6] The entire stretch in West Bengal happens to be a toll zone. There are toll plazas at three places: Asansol, Palsit and Dankuni. Asansol toll plaza is now closed. Also a toll plaza is there at Banskopa near Durgapur.And a new toll booth has been established at Maithon More in Jharkhand, just a few kilometres after crossing the bridge on Barakar River. According to the NHAI's statistical record, in 2008 everyday about 850,000 to 900,000 vehicles plied between Barakar and Dankuni. The gross toll collection amounted to Rs 2,500,000 per day. Large number of buses ply along NH 2. South Bengal State Transport Corporation operates 47 buses between Durgapur and Kolkata alone. In 2008 South Bengal State Transport Corporation has started bus services between Burdwan and Kolkata.Both AC and non AC buses are available. There are around 50 buses. In 2011 Royal Express AC bus service was started between Burdwan and Kolkata.[7]

National Highways Development Project edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). New Delhi: Department of Road Transport and Highways. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  2. ^ "New Numbering of National Highways notification - Government of India" (PDF). The Gazette of India. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  3. ^ Top 10 Best Flyovers in India. Walkthroughindia.com. Retrieved on 2013-12-06.
  4. ^ . Status : 31st Aug, 2005. National Highways Authority of India. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  5. ^ "NHAI to award Rs 8,000-cr contracts in two months". The Hindu Business Line, 22 October 2001. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  6. ^ (PDF). “Asia on the Move: Energy Efficient and Inclusive Transport” Presented by S.K. Gupta. ADB Transport Forum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  7. ^ Siddiqui, Kanchan. "NHAI, truckers incur heavy losses". The Statesman, 27 August 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2009. [dead link]
  8. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 2014-10-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) National Highways-Source-National Highways Authority of India (NHAI)
  9. ^ "NHAI to widen Delhi-Agra highway into six-lane road". 27 May 2010.

External links edit

  • Old NH 2 on OpenStreetMap

national, highway, india, numbering, national, highway, currently, national, highway, major, national, highway, india, that, connected, states, delhi, haryana, uttar, pradesh, bihar, jharkhand, west, bengal, constitutes, major, portion, historical, grand, trun. Old National Highway 2 or Old NH 2 currently National Highway 19 was a major National Highway in India that connected the states of Delhi Haryana Uttar Pradesh Bihar Jharkhand and West Bengal It constitutes a major portion of the historical Grand Trunk Road along with old NH 91 and old NH 1 in India The highway connects national capital Delhi with Kolkata as well as important cities such as Faridabad Mathura Agra Kanpur Allahabad Varanasi Dhanbad Asansol Durgapur and Bardhaman 1 National Highway 2Road map of India with National Highway 2 highlighted in solid blue colorRoute informationPart of AH1Length1 465 km 910 mi GQ 1454 km New Delhi Kolkata NS 253 km New Delhi Agra EW 35 km Barah Kanpur Major junctionsWest endNew DelhiMajor intersectionsList NH 1 in DelhiNH 8 in DelhiNH 10 in DelhiNH 24 in DelhiNH 3 in AgraNH 11 in AgraNH 93 in AgraNH 92 in EtawahNH 91A in EtawahNH 2A in SikandraNH 25 in KanpurNH 86 in KanpurNH 91 in KanpurNH 2 in Fatehpur DistrictNH 28E in Fatehpur DistrictNH 24B in AllahabadNH 27 in AllahabadNH 76 in AllahabadNH 96 in AllahabadNH 7 in VaranasiNH 29 in VaranasiNH 56 in VaranasiNH 97 in SaiyedrajaNH 30 in MohaniaNH 98 in AurangabadNH 83 in DobhiNH 31 in BarhiNH 33 in BarhiNH 100 in BagodarNH 32 in GobindpurNH 60 in RaniganjNH 6 in KolkataNH 34 in KolkataEast endDankuni near KolkataLocationCountryIndiaStatesDelhi 12 km Haryana 74 km Uttar Pradesh 752 km Bihar 202 km Jharkhand 190 km West Bengal 235 km It is also part of AH1 of Asian Highway Network that traverses from Japan to Turkey PrimarydestinationsNew Delhi Faridabad Agra Etawah Auraiya Akbarpur Panki Barra Kidwai Nagar Kanpur Chakeri Rooma Maharajpur Sarsaul Bindki Fatehpur District Khaga Kaushambi Allahabad Varanasi Mughalsarai Mohania Barhi Panagarh PalsitHighway systemRoads in IndiaExpressways National State Asian NH 1D NH 2AA view of Delhi Faridabad Skyway Delhi NCRDurgapur Expressway part of NH 2 Contents 1 Renumbering 2 Route and length 3 In Haryana 4 In Uttar Pradesh 5 In Bihar 6 In Jharkhand 7 In West Bengal 8 National Highways Development Project 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksRenumbering editThis NH has been renumbered as NH 19 and NH 44 after renumbering of all national highways by Ministry of Road Transport and Highways in 2010 and the old NH 2 number has ceased to exist Now Delhi to Agra stretch is part of NH 44 and Agra to Kolkata stretch is NH 19 2 Route and length editThe road was the part of National Highway network of India and it is officially listed as running over 1 465 km The kilometer counts in each of the states were Delhi 12 Haryana 74 Uttar Pradesh 752 Bihar 202 Jharkhand 190 West Bengal 235 In Haryana editNH 2 entered Haryana through Badarpur border at Delhi Faridabad Skyway in Faridabad It ran parallel to the Faridabad corridor of Delhi Metro and passed through Palwal before entering Uttar Pradesh In Uttar Pradesh edit nbsp NH 2 Khaga Fatehpur district Uttar Pradesh West east alignment The National Highway 2 entered Uttar Pradesh from Haryana in Mathura district and a part of it is known as Mathura Road Before Mathura it covers Palwal and Faridabad city in Haryana After Mathura it reaches Agra which is about 200 km 120 mi In Agra it covers about 16 km 9 9 mi After leaving Agra it enters in Firozabad district and then Etawah where 15 km bypass of city is made After leaving Etawah it enters Kanpur city where a 23 km 14 mi and 12 lane Kanpur over bridge has been built which is also one of the largest over bridges in the Asia 3 In Kanpur it covers industrial belts Akbarpur Maharajpur around 60 km 37 mi and then it reaches Fatehpur District and covers 16 km 9 9 mi area of Fatehpur then it reaches Allahabad via Kaushambi and covers 16 km 9 9 mi in city then reachesVaranasi Mughalsarai covers 15 km 9 3 mi and thus leaves U P This national highway has given a new life to public transport in Northern India The overbridges built in Agra Kanpur Fatehpur and Allahabad have reduced city traffic problems Allahabad Bypass Expressway is also the country s longest bypass section In Bihar edit West east alignment The Bihar stretch of NH 2 starts from the bridge on the Karmanasa River that forms the border with Uttar Pradesh NH 2 runs for 202 km in the state and then enters Jharkhand between Dobhi and Chauparan around Barachatti In between it passes through Kaimur district Mohania is the first major city on it Also NH 30 is connected to In the city and leads to Patna city The next city is Sasaram where there is the tomb of Great Emperor Sher Shah Suri At Dehri on Son it crosses the wide expanse of the Son River over the Jawahar Setu At Dobhi it meets the road to Gaya and Patna NH 83 NH 98 from Patna to Daltonganj crosses NH 2 at Aurangabad In Jharkhand edit East west alignment The Jharkhand stretch of NH 2 extends from the bridge on the Barakar River on the Asansol Nirsa bypass to around Barachatti and runs for 190 kilometres 120 mi Immediately after crossing into Jharkhand from West Bengal NH2 meets the junction with the road on the north leading to Maithon and the road on the south leading to Panchet NH 2 returns to old Grand Trunk Road at Nirsa At Gobindpur NH 2 meets NH 32 leading to Dhanbad and Jamshedpur At Topchanchi there is a picturesque lake off NH2 Thereafter for a long stretch up to Isri the massive Parasnath Hills Shikharji dominates on the northern side of NH 2 At Dumri the road on the north leads to Madhuban and Giridih The next important junction is Bagodar where NH 100 meets NH2 There is a road leading to Hazaribagh Road station At Barhi is the crossing with NH31 and NH33 Between Chauparan and Dobhi around Barachatti NH 2 crosses over to Bihar Much of the Jharkhand sector of NH 2 passes through an undulating area on Koderma plateau In West Bengal edit East west alignment The West Bengal end of NH 2 starts or terminates at Dankuni in the outskirts of Kolkata 4 There is a 6 kilometres 3 7 mi stretch to the Nivedita Bridge and thereafter Belghoria Expressway links it to Barrackpur Trunk Road and Jessore Road NH 34 Alternatively Kolkata bound traffic takes the NH 6 at Dankuni and then follows the Kona Expressway NH 117 and Vidyasagar Setu to enter Kolkata The four lane West Bengal portion of NH 2 stretches from Barakar to Dankuni and the entire stretch is complete The 65 kilometres 40 mi Dankuni Palsit stretch is also known as Durgapur Expressway From Palsit to the outskirts of Asansol it follows the old Grand Trunk Road bypassing such towns as Saktigarh Bardhaman and Raniganj but passes through Durgapur and Andal The Palsit Panagarh stretch is 64 kilometres 40 mi and the Panagarh Raniganj stretch is 42 kilometres 26 mi At Panagarh Darjeeling Mor NH 2 meets Panagarh Morgram Highway In the outskirts of Asansol NH 2 leaves Grand Trunk Road The latter passes through crowded areas of Asansol Neamatpur Kulti and Barakar in West Bengal and Chirkunda and Kumardhubi in Jharkhand A bypass links the outskirts of Asansol with Nirsa where the NH 2 gets back to Grand Trunk Road The Raniganj Barakar stretch is 33 kilometres 21 mi The widened 120 kilometres 75 mi Panagarh Dhanbad stretch was thrown open to traffic in 2001 5 Construction cost of the 130 kilometres 81 mi Panagarh Dankuni section was 178 million US dollars 6 The entire stretch in West Bengal happens to be a toll zone There are toll plazas at three places Asansol Palsit and Dankuni Asansol toll plaza is now closed Also a toll plaza is there at Banskopa near Durgapur And a new toll booth has been established at Maithon More in Jharkhand just a few kilometres after crossing the bridge on Barakar River According to the NHAI s statistical record in 2008 everyday about 850 000 to 900 000 vehicles plied between Barakar and Dankuni The gross toll collection amounted to Rs 2 500 000 per day Large number of buses ply along NH 2 South Bengal State Transport Corporation operates 47 buses between Durgapur and Kolkata alone In 2008 South Bengal State Transport Corporation has started bus services between Burdwan and Kolkata Both AC and non AC buses are available There are around 50 buses In 2011 Royal Express AC bus service was started between Burdwan and Kolkata 7 National Highways Development Project editAlmost all of the 1 465 km 910 mi stretch of NH 2 has been selected as a part of the Golden Quadrilateral by the National Highways Development Project 8 Approximately 253 km 157 mi stretch of NH 2 between Delhi and Agra has been selected as a part of the North South Corridor by the National Highways Development Project 8 Approximately 35 km 22 mi stretch of NH 2 between Barah and Kanpur has been selected as a part of the East West Corridor by the National Highways Development Project 8 Six Laning of 180 Km long Delhi Agra stretch of NH 2 under NHDP phase V by NHAI through its concessionaire Reliance Infrastructure 9 See also editList of National Highways in India by Highway Number National Highways Development ProjectReferences edit Rationalisation of Numbering Systems of National Highways PDF New Delhi Department of Road Transport and Highways Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2016 Retrieved 3 April 2012 New Numbering of National Highways notification Government of India PDF The Gazette of India Retrieved 14 November 2018 Top 10 Best Flyovers in India Walkthroughindia com Retrieved on 2013 12 06 Completed Stretches on NH2 Delhi Kolkata Status 31st Aug 2005 National Highways Authority of India Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2009 NHAI to award Rs 8 000 cr contracts in two months The Hindu Business Line 22 October 2001 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Public Private Participation Success Stories in India PDF Asia on the Move Energy Efficient and Inclusive Transport Presented by S K Gupta ADB Transport Forum Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Siddiqui Kanchan NHAI truckers incur heavy losses The Statesman 27 August 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2009 dead link a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 2014 10 29 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link National Highways Source National Highways Authority of India NHAI NHAI to widen Delhi Agra highway into six lane road 27 May 2010 External links editOld NH 2 on OpenStreetMap nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to NH 2 Old Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Highway 2 India old numbering amp oldid 1155239704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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