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Western railway elevated corridor

The Western Railway Elevated Corridor, also known as the Oval Maidan-Virar elevated corridor, was a proposed rapid transit corridor that would have run along the same alignment as the Western Line of the Mumbai Suburban Railway, and link Oval Maidan with Virar.

Western Railway Elevated Corridor
Overview
StatusRejected due to financial viability
OwnerIndian Railways
LocaleMumbai, Maharashtra
Mira-Bhayandar, Maharashtra
Vasai-Virar, Maharashtra
Termini
Stations26
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemMumbai Suburban Railway
Operator(s)Western Railway (WR)
Daily ridership1.7 million (2019-20 estimate)
Technical
Line length63.27 km (39.31 mi)
Number of tracks2
CharacterElevated, underground and at grade
Track gauge5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm)
Operating speed100 km/h
Route map

Western railway elevated corridor

History Edit

The Western railway elevated corridor was first proposed in the 2007 Railway Budget presented by then Railway Minister Laloo Prasad Yadav.[1] The technical feasibility report for the project was prepared by Rail India Technical and Economic Service (RITES) and the French firm Systra.[2] On 23 August 2012, Western Railway (WR) held a planning meeting with potentially interested parties at Churchgate station. The meeting included 20 companies including Reliance infrastructure, Gammon, IL&FS, Essar and GMR.[3] According to Sharat Chandrayan, CPRO of WR, "The road-show was mainly to explain requirements for the project to prospective bidders and to understand their suggestions before bidding takes place".[4] A delay occurred in signing of the State Support Agreement (SSA) between WR and the Government of Maharashtra due to differences of opinion between the State Government, the Planning Commission and the railways[5] on issues related to FSI, land acquisition, shifting of underground utilities and commercial use of land.[6] The SSA is the state's commitment to help Railways in land acquisition, shifting utility services on time and attaining more FSI to help developers generate funds. WR demanded an FSI of five for 13 land parcels across the city, in order to optimise commercial development of its existing plots as major source of funds for the project. However, the state government expressed reservations in granting an FSI up to four, saying that it would permit need-based FSI only. The project is planned to be implemented as a joint public-private partnership (PPP) project of the railways, the state government and private organisation on Design, Build, Finance, Operate and Transfer (DBFOT) basis.[7]

The project received in-principle approval from Maharashtra government on 9 April 2013.[8] The Maharashtra government sought central funding for the Mumbai Elevated Rail Corridor Project, which is aimed to revolutionise suburban commuting in the city.[9] In August 2013, the railway ministry issued new Request For Qualification (RFQ) documents for the project, about a week after withdrawing previously issued RFQ documents. The ministry had withdrawn the documents after realizing that the dispute between the state government and the railways over the signing of the SSA was frightening off potential bidders. Six infrastructure firms – Reliance, Larsen and Toubro, GMR, Gammon, ILFS and CAF Spain – had bought the earlier RFQ document at a cost of ₹1 million (US$16,000) each.[10] The railway ministry announced on 17 September 2013, that the deadline for expressing interest had been extended to 29 November from 20 October. "Unless the agreement with the state government is signed it will be difficult for the project to take off", he said.[11]

The state government clarified it would not permit a higher FSI for the project, and lobbied for its own Mumbai Metro project.[12] The state government opposes the elevated rail corridor project, arguing that the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro Metro project between Colaba and SEEPZ follows the same route.[12] Following the November meeting, WR commissioned RITES to conduct a study on passenger volume projections if the route were shortened. The state government had suggested that the corridor be terminated at Bandra. The study found that terminating the corridor at Bandra would result in 40% reduction in passenger volume, which would make the project financially unviable.[13]

The PMO ordered a fresh traffic study for the elevated corridor in November 2013. In an infrastructure review meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in November 2013, Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan stated that there should be a rethink on the project as the proposed Mumbai Metro would partially be on the same alignment as the elevated corridor. The feasibility study conducted by the Indian Railways a couple of years prior had found that the elevated corridor would have a ridership of 1.1 million in the first year of its operations. The Railways commissioned Rail India Technical and Economic Service (RITES), its engineering arm, to conduct a fresh study as instructed by the PMO. Railways also postponed the last date for RFQ to 31 January 2013. According to a railway board official, the contract for the corridor will be awarded by May 2014, if the Maharashtra government agrees to sign the state support agreement (SSA), after the new report. The earlier date for awarding the contract, fixed by the PMO, was 31 January 2014. Eight infrastructure companies – Reliance Infrastructure, Gammon India, Larsen and Toubro (L&T), Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services Ltd (IL&FS), GMR Infrastructure Ltd, Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF), Siemens AG and Tata Realty and Infrastructure have applied for the project.[14] During the meeting, the state government clarified it would not permit a higher FSI for the project, and lobbied for its own Mumbai Metro project.[12] The state government opposes the elevated rail corridor project, arguing that the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro Metro project between Colaba and SEEPZ partially traverses an alignment similar to the elevated corridor.[12] Following the November meeting, WR commissioned RITES to conduct a study on passenger volume projections if the elevated corridor was allowed to operate only between Virar and Bandra. The state government had suggested that the corridor be terminated at Bandra, instead of Oval Maidan, because the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro would partially run on the same alignment as the elevated rail corridor. The study found that terminating the corridor at Bandra would result in an estimated loss in ridership of 40%, which would make the project financially unviable.[13]

The 2014 Rail Budget presented by railway minister Mallikarjun Kharge did not mention the elevated corridor, drawing criticism from railway officials and commuters who had been following the project.[15] In April 2014, the Railway Board instructed WR to halt all work they had undertaken with regards to the project. Subodh Jain, member (engineering) of the Railway Board, stated, "The Oval Maidan-Virar elevated corridor has gone cold due to lack of interest by the state government." The Ministry of Railways shelved the project stating that until the government shows interest in the project, there was no need to carry out any work.[16] Following a change at the centre and a new Railway Minister, after the 2014 general elections, there was renewed interest in the project. Chairman of Railway Board Arunendra Kumar and the Chief Secretary of Maharashtra J. Saharia met on 14 June 2014 to discuss the future of the project.[17] On 8 January 2015, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu announced that the elevated corridor and the CST-Panvel corridor would be implemented.[18] According to a new proposal, a 6-lane road will be constructed on the same pier as the elevated rail corridors.[19]

In March 2015, the Railways suggested terminating the south-end of the line at Andheri, in response to the Maharashtra Government's concern that extending the line to Oval Maidan or Churchgate would be complicated. Due to space constraints in South Mumbai, the southern section of the line was planned to be underground from Oval Maidan to Mahalaxmi. However, the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro would pass through the same area, requiring the construction of a tunnel at greater depth for the WR corridor. The presence of several listed heritage buildings in the area also made the task more difficult.[20] On 5 May 2015, DNA reported that an announcement to scrap the project was expected to come soon. The paper quoted a senior railway official as stating that the project "still remained in limbo as the state and the railways couldn't sign the State Support Agreement since May 2012."[21]

Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu announced on 25 February 2016, while presenting the Railway Budget, that the elevated corridor project would be implemented. In March 2016, Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation (MRVC) announced that it had sent the Maharashtra government a modified state support agreement (SSA) for an elevated corridor from Andheri to Virar. The SSA had been the primary cause of the delay under the previous NCP-Congress government, who objected to clauses in the agreement that placed responsibilities for rehabilitation and shifting of underground utilities on state government agencies. The MVRC estimates that the Andheri-Virar corridor can be built at an estimated cost of 10,000 crore (US$1.3 billion) on PPP model.[22]

In August 2016, Chief Minister Fadnavis announced that the state government had approved the SSA. He also stated that the project had received in-principle clearance from the NITI Aayog.[23] According to railway officials, tenders for work on the project may only be floated by the end of 2017.[24] In December 2017, the Union Railway Minister Piyush Goyal stated that the project would not be implemented because it was financially unviable.[25]

Route Edit

It will consist of a 63.27 km two-track elevated corridor running above the existing Western Line, occasionally going underground and at ground level. The elevated sections will be 15 to 20 m above the ground, and higher at Andheri in order to clear the new Mumbai Metro station.[26] The corridor was initially proposed to go underground for 8.04 km from Oval Maidan to Mahalaxmi. Between Mahalaxmi and Borivali, the line will be elevated for 25.22 km and then at grade for 2.20 km. In the final stretch, between Borivali and Virar, 17.50 km would be elevated and 10.31 km would be at grade. Approximately, 42.72 km of the corridor was to be elevated, 8.04 km would be underground and the remaining 12.52 km at grade.[27]

Railway officials announced on 29 September 2012 that a decision had been taken to alter the earlier alignment and go underground for an additional 8.5 km stretch between Bandra and Jogeshwari to avoid having to buy and remove over 100 buildings extant on the planned route. This will increase the project cost by 12 billion (US$150 million). According to Mahesh Kumar, general manager of WR, the realignment would save money because he estimates that land acquisition and rehabilitation along the stretch would cost over 20 billion (US$250 million).[28] As a result of the changes, 16.6 km of the corridor will now be underground, 10 km will run at grade alongside existing tracks and 36.4 km will be elevated.[29] The underground sections include the 8.04 km stretch between Oval Maidan and Mahalaxmi, and the 8.56 km stretch between Bandra and Jogeshwari that was proposed in the amended plans. The at grade section, roughly lying between north Santacruz and north Vile Parle, is because of restrictions in height placed by the Airports Authority of India.[27] The stretches between Dahisar-Mira Road, Bhayander-Vasai and at Virar will also be at grade. The remaining stretches will be elevated.[30]

Initially, 26 stations were proposed. However, WR may cancel 3 or 4 stations to reduce cost and land acquisition. Stations that are situated close together or estimated to have low passenger traffic may be dropped from the plan. Matunga Road, Mahim and Naigaon stations have been proposed to be cancelled.[31]

The elevated corridor is expected to take 30% of the load off existing lines. Western Railway (WR) intends to fund the project by commercially developing 130,000 square metres of land in 8 locations, of which five plots are Mumbai Central, Bandra, Andheri, Mahalaxmi and Borivali.

The Virar maintenance depot was planned to require 65 hectares of land, but the new one will require 40.8 hectares of land, due to a decision by WR to reduce the proposed number of coaches on a train from the earlier 15 to 8.[32] Oval Maidan station will be integrated with Hutatma Chowk station on the proposed Colaba-Bandra line of the Mumbai Metro.

Stations Edit

The line will have 26 stations - 5 underground, 19 elevated and 2 at grade.[33][34]

# Station name Layout
1 Oval Maidan Underground
2 Churchgate Underground
3 Charni Road Underground
4 Mumbai Central Underground
5 Mahalaxmi Underground
6 Lower Parel Elevated
7 Prabhadevi Elevated
8 Dadar Elevated
9 Matunga Road Elevated
10 Mahim Elevated
11 Bandra Elevated
12 Santacruz Elevated
13 Vile Parle Elevated
14 Andheri Elevated
15 Jogeshwari Elevated
16 Goregaon Elevated
17 Malad Elevated
18 Kandivali Elevated
19 Borivali Elevated
20 Dahisar Elevated
21 Mira Road At grade
22 Bhayandar Elevated
23 Naigaon At grade
24 Vasai Road At grade
25 Nala Sopara Elevated
26 Virar At grade

Extension Edit

Indian Railways plans to extend the corridor from Oval Maidan to either Mantralaya or Nariman Point.[35]

Cost Edit

The project is estimated to cost 200 billion (US$2.5 billion)[36] and will be implemented through a public-private partnership (PPP) mode on Design, Build, Finance, Operate and Transfer (DBFOT) basis by a private entity.[27] The Central Government will provide 20% of the project cost as viability gap funding.[30]

Infrastructure Edit

The rolling stock proposed will consist of 3,660-mm wide air-conditioned coaches. The corridor will have emergency sidings.[27]

Operations Edit

  • Services will run daily from 5am - 12am. Trains will be available every 90 seconds and will halt at each station for 30 seconds.[27]
  • Trains will be able to transport 90,000 passengers PHPDT (Peak Hour Peak Direction Traffic).[27]
  • Trains will have an optimum speed of 100 km/h.[27]

Criticism Edit

1. The Elevated Railway Corridor has been surveyed to be aligned along the Western Side of the Western Railway Suburban Corridor (Not above the existing Railway Lines). This means that the Elevated Corridor would duplicate the Existing route and compete for the same passengers.

2. Western Railway has vacant land only between Borivali to Jogeshwari and Bandra to Dadar to lay the Pillars of the Elevated Corridor. This would mean that Western Railway has to acquire a large number of expensive Multi Storey properties between Jogeshwari and Bandra and Dadar to Churchgate to lay the Elevated Corridor.

3. There are many Road over Bridges on the Western Railway tracks between Churchgate and Virar which would have to be crossed over through Double Decker Bridges making them very expensive and complicated.

4. Oval Maidan is part of the Mumbai's Art Deco Heritage Precinct and it is highly unlikely that Mumbai Heritage Committee will allow a Railway Terminus on the Iconic Maidan.

5. Western Railway would have to construct this immensely expensive project and at the same time maintain the same fare structure as on the existing Sub-urban Railway network making this project highly financially unviable.

Alternatives Edit

Western Railway suburban corridor between Churchgate to Virar primarily consists of 4 Tracks, 2 slow lines and 2 Fast lines. The Fast lines are shared with outstation trains between Mumbai central and Virar. A 5th line exists between Mumbai Central to Mahim and Bandra Suburban Railway station (East) to Borivali via Bandra Terminus (BDTS), the former used by outstation trains between Mumbai Central to Dadar by trains originating and terminating at Mumbai Central whereas the latter is used by Trains originating and Terminating in Bandra Terminus.

By constructing a dedicated double line corridor between Mumbai Central and Virar, Western Railway can segregate the Suburban Corridor and outstation corridor and thereby increase the number of Local Trains on the Suburban corridor.

Moreover, Railway already owns land for laying a 6th line between Mumbai Central to Borivali and 2 lines between Borivali to Virar.

  1. On the Western side of the existing tracks between Mumbai Central and Lower Parel.
  2. On the Eastern side of the existing tracks between Lower Parel and Matunga Road.
  3. On the Western side of the existing tracks between Matunga Road and Mahim.
  4. Elevated viaduct above the WEH stretching from Sion-Mahim ROB to Khar Subway landing, via 5th line between Bandra(S) and Khar.
  5. On the Eastern side of the existing tracks between Khar and Kandivali Carshed.
  6. Clear bottlenecks at Vile parle Level crossing.
  7. On the Western side of the existing tracks between Kandivali Carshed and Borivali.
  8. Land for 5th and 6th line on the Western side of the existing tracks between Borivali and Virar.

Since Railways own most of the land for the 5th and 6th line, it would be more cost effective and financially viable vis-a-vis the Elevated Corridor.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Highlights of the Railway Budget 2007-08". www.rediff.com.
  2. ^ Devasia, Sanjeev (16 February 2009). "First step toward the Mumbai-Virar elevated 2-track corridor project". Mumbai: Mid Day. p. 1. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  3. ^ "India's Western Railway stages bidder briefing for Mumbai rail project". Railjournal.com. 24 August 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  4. ^ . Hindustan Times. 24 August 2012. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  5. ^ . The Times of India. 18 June 2013. Archived from the original on 29 December 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  6. ^ "No movement yet on Oval Maidan Virar Elevated Corridor". Indian Express. 8 June 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  7. ^ "Indian Railways' Mumbai elevated rail corridor on track". Rail.co. 16 August 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  8. ^ "Elevated Rail Corridor project gets in-principle nod". Articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com. 9 April 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  9. ^ "Maharashtra wants centre to fund suburban elevated rail corridor". Newstrackindia.com. 3 May 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  10. ^ "Railway's gives ray of hope for Oval Maidan-Virar elevated corridor". 12 August 2013.
  11. ^ "Elevated rail corridor project faces further delay". Mumbai Mirror.
  12. ^ a b c d "Railway India Technical and Economic Services: Elevated rail corridor survey underway | Mumbai News - Times of India". The Times of India. 4 January 2014.
  13. ^ a b "Elevated rail corridor only till Bandra will be unviable | Mumbai News - Times of India". The Times of India. 8 April 2014.
  14. ^ "Mumbai elevated corridor plan on track, says railways". The Financial Express. 5 December 2013.
  15. ^ . www.asianage.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  16. ^ "Oval Maidan-Virar elevated rail corridor: After elevating commuters hopes, railways ditch proposed corridor". 26 April 2014.
  17. ^ "State govt wants to prioritise Metro Line 3 over Elevated Corridor". 16 June 2014.
  18. ^ . www.asianage.com. Archived from the original on 15 January 2015. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  19. ^ "Railways, state government plan to build elevated rail, road on same pier | Mumbai News - Times of India". The Times of India. 9 January 2015.
  20. ^ "Elevated rail corridor till Oval Maidan could end at Andheri". Mumbai Mirror.
  21. ^ "Mumbai elevated corridor plan falls by wayside". 5 May 2015.
  22. ^ "Andheri-Virar elevated rail gets boost - Times of India". The Times of India. 30 March 2016. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  23. ^ "Maharashtra CM Fadnavis assures elevated rail corridor plans on track". dna. 15 August 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  24. ^ "Mumbai's elevated rail corridor plans on track, but delayed by a year". dna. 8 November 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  25. ^ Deshpande, Umakant (20 December 2017). "Piyush Goyal scraps elevated corridor". The Asian Age. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  26. ^ "First step toward the Mumbai-Virar elevated 2-track corridor project". www.mid-day.com.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g "Oval Maidan-Virar elevated rail corridor gets a forward push". Indian Express. 5 August 2012.
  28. ^ . Hindustan Times. 4 October 2012. Archived from the original on 4 October 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  29. ^ Sanjeev Devasia (16 October 2012). "Help us get land for elevated corridor: Railways". Dnaindia.com. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  30. ^ a b Sandeep Ashar (16 October 2012). . The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  31. ^ Manthan K Mehta (7 September 2012). . The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  32. ^ Binoo Nair (6 April 2013). "Your AC train to Virar will have 8 coaches". DNA India. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  33. ^ Raghvendra Rao (5 August 2012). "Oval Maidan-Virar elevated rail corridor gets a forward push". The Indian Express. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  34. ^ . Hindustan Times. 8 August 2012. Archived from the original on 7 March 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  35. ^ Manthan K Mehta (7 August 2012). . The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  36. ^ "Railway 'dumps' metro from Mumbai corridor plan". Dnaindia.com. 4 August 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2013.

External links Edit

  • Project Information Memorandum (Indian Railways)

western, railway, elevated, corridor, western, railway, elevated, corridor, also, known, oval, maidan, virar, elevated, corridor, proposed, rapid, transit, corridor, that, would, have, along, same, alignment, western, line, mumbai, suburban, railway, link, ova. The Western Railway Elevated Corridor also known as the Oval Maidan Virar elevated corridor was a proposed rapid transit corridor that would have run along the same alignment as the Western Line of the Mumbai Suburban Railway and link Oval Maidan with Virar Western Railway Elevated CorridorOverviewStatusRejected due to financial viabilityOwnerIndian RailwaysLocaleMumbai MaharashtraMira Bhayandar MaharashtraVasai Virar MaharashtraTerminiOval MaidanVirarStations26ServiceTypeRapid transitSystemMumbai Suburban RailwayOperator s Western Railway WR Daily ridership1 7 million 2019 20 estimate TechnicalLine length63 27 km 39 31 mi Number of tracks2CharacterElevated underground and at gradeTrack gauge5 ft 6 in 1 676 mm Operating speed100 km hRoute mapLegendWestern railway elevated corridorVirarNala SoparaVasai Road Central lineNaigaonVasai CreekBhayandarMira RoadDahisarBorivaliKandivaliMaladGoregaonJogeshwariAndheri Line 1Harbour lineVile Parle Sahar AirportSantacruz Sahar AirportBandra Harbour line Line 2Mithi RiverMahimMatunga RoadDadar Central lineMumbai Monorail Line 3PrabhadeviLower ParelMahalaxmi Line 3Mumbai Central Line 3Grant Road Line 3Churchgate Line 3Oval Maidanproposed extension toMantralaya or Nariman PointThis diagram viewtalkedit Contents 1 History 2 Route 3 Stations 4 Extension 5 Cost 6 Infrastructure 7 Operations 8 Criticism 9 Alternatives 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditThe Western railway elevated corridor was first proposed in the 2007 Railway Budget presented by then Railway Minister Laloo Prasad Yadav 1 The technical feasibility report for the project was prepared by Rail India Technical and Economic Service RITES and the French firm Systra 2 On 23 August 2012 Western Railway WR held a planning meeting with potentially interested parties at Churchgate station The meeting included 20 companies including Reliance infrastructure Gammon IL amp FS Essar and GMR 3 According to Sharat Chandrayan CPRO of WR The road show was mainly to explain requirements for the project to prospective bidders and to understand their suggestions before bidding takes place 4 A delay occurred in signing of the State Support Agreement SSA between WR and the Government of Maharashtra due to differences of opinion between the State Government the Planning Commission and the railways 5 on issues related to FSI land acquisition shifting of underground utilities and commercial use of land 6 The SSA is the state s commitment to help Railways in land acquisition shifting utility services on time and attaining more FSI to help developers generate funds WR demanded an FSI of five for 13 land parcels across the city in order to optimise commercial development of its existing plots as major source of funds for the project However the state government expressed reservations in granting an FSI up to four saying that it would permit need based FSI only The project is planned to be implemented as a joint public private partnership PPP project of the railways the state government and private organisation on Design Build Finance Operate and Transfer DBFOT basis 7 The project received in principle approval from Maharashtra government on 9 April 2013 8 The Maharashtra government sought central funding for the Mumbai Elevated Rail Corridor Project which is aimed to revolutionise suburban commuting in the city 9 In August 2013 the railway ministry issued new Request For Qualification RFQ documents for the project about a week after withdrawing previously issued RFQ documents The ministry had withdrawn the documents after realizing that the dispute between the state government and the railways over the signing of the SSA was frightening off potential bidders Six infrastructure firms Reliance Larsen and Toubro GMR Gammon ILFS and CAF Spain had bought the earlier RFQ document at a cost of 1 million US 16 000 each 10 The railway ministry announced on 17 September 2013 that the deadline for expressing interest had been extended to 29 November from 20 October Unless the agreement with the state government is signed it will be difficult for the project to take off he said 11 The state government clarified it would not permit a higher FSI for the project and lobbied for its own Mumbai Metro project 12 The state government opposes the elevated rail corridor project arguing that the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro Metro project between Colaba and SEEPZ follows the same route 12 Following the November meeting WR commissioned RITES to conduct a study on passenger volume projections if the route were shortened The state government had suggested that the corridor be terminated at Bandra The study found that terminating the corridor at Bandra would result in 40 reduction in passenger volume which would make the project financially unviable 13 The PMO ordered a fresh traffic study for the elevated corridor in November 2013 In an infrastructure review meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in November 2013 Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan stated that there should be a rethink on the project as the proposed Mumbai Metro would partially be on the same alignment as the elevated corridor The feasibility study conducted by the Indian Railways a couple of years prior had found that the elevated corridor would have a ridership of 1 1 million in the first year of its operations The Railways commissioned Rail India Technical and Economic Service RITES its engineering arm to conduct a fresh study as instructed by the PMO Railways also postponed the last date for RFQ to 31 January 2013 According to a railway board official the contract for the corridor will be awarded by May 2014 if the Maharashtra government agrees to sign the state support agreement SSA after the new report The earlier date for awarding the contract fixed by the PMO was 31 January 2014 Eight infrastructure companies Reliance Infrastructure Gammon India Larsen and Toubro L amp T Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services Ltd IL amp FS GMR Infrastructure Ltd Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles CAF Siemens AG and Tata Realty and Infrastructure have applied for the project 14 During the meeting the state government clarified it would not permit a higher FSI for the project and lobbied for its own Mumbai Metro project 12 The state government opposes the elevated rail corridor project arguing that the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro Metro project between Colaba and SEEPZ partially traverses an alignment similar to the elevated corridor 12 Following the November meeting WR commissioned RITES to conduct a study on passenger volume projections if the elevated corridor was allowed to operate only between Virar and Bandra The state government had suggested that the corridor be terminated at Bandra instead of Oval Maidan because the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro would partially run on the same alignment as the elevated rail corridor The study found that terminating the corridor at Bandra would result in an estimated loss in ridership of 40 which would make the project financially unviable 13 The 2014 Rail Budget presented by railway minister Mallikarjun Kharge did not mention the elevated corridor drawing criticism from railway officials and commuters who had been following the project 15 In April 2014 the Railway Board instructed WR to halt all work they had undertaken with regards to the project Subodh Jain member engineering of the Railway Board stated The Oval Maidan Virar elevated corridor has gone cold due to lack of interest by the state government The Ministry of Railways shelved the project stating that until the government shows interest in the project there was no need to carry out any work 16 Following a change at the centre and a new Railway Minister after the 2014 general elections there was renewed interest in the project Chairman of Railway Board Arunendra Kumar and the Chief Secretary of Maharashtra J Saharia met on 14 June 2014 to discuss the future of the project 17 On 8 January 2015 Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu announced that the elevated corridor and the CST Panvel corridor would be implemented 18 According to a new proposal a 6 lane road will be constructed on the same pier as the elevated rail corridors 19 In March 2015 the Railways suggested terminating the south end of the line at Andheri in response to the Maharashtra Government s concern that extending the line to Oval Maidan or Churchgate would be complicated Due to space constraints in South Mumbai the southern section of the line was planned to be underground from Oval Maidan to Mahalaxmi However the proposed Line 3 of the Mumbai Metro would pass through the same area requiring the construction of a tunnel at greater depth for the WR corridor The presence of several listed heritage buildings in the area also made the task more difficult 20 On 5 May 2015 DNA reported that an announcement to scrap the project was expected to come soon The paper quoted a senior railway official as stating that the project still remained in limbo as the state and the railways couldn t sign the State Support Agreement since May 2012 21 Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu announced on 25 February 2016 while presenting the Railway Budget that the elevated corridor project would be implemented In March 2016 Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation MRVC announced that it had sent the Maharashtra government a modified state support agreement SSA for an elevated corridor from Andheri to Virar The SSA had been the primary cause of the delay under the previous NCP Congress government who objected to clauses in the agreement that placed responsibilities for rehabilitation and shifting of underground utilities on state government agencies The MVRC estimates that the Andheri Virar corridor can be built at an estimated cost of 10 000 crore US 1 3 billion on PPP model 22 In August 2016 Chief Minister Fadnavis announced that the state government had approved the SSA He also stated that the project had received in principle clearance from the NITI Aayog 23 According to railway officials tenders for work on the project may only be floated by the end of 2017 24 In December 2017 the Union Railway Minister Piyush Goyal stated that the project would not be implemented because it was financially unviable 25 Route EditIt will consist of a 63 27 km two track elevated corridor running above the existing Western Line occasionally going underground and at ground level The elevated sections will be 15 to 20 m above the ground and higher at Andheri in order to clear the new Mumbai Metro station 26 The corridor was initially proposed to go underground for 8 04 km from Oval Maidan to Mahalaxmi Between Mahalaxmi and Borivali the line will be elevated for 25 22 km and then at grade for 2 20 km In the final stretch between Borivali and Virar 17 50 km would be elevated and 10 31 km would be at grade Approximately 42 72 km of the corridor was to be elevated 8 04 km would be underground and the remaining 12 52 km at grade 27 Railway officials announced on 29 September 2012 that a decision had been taken to alter the earlier alignment and go underground for an additional 8 5 km stretch between Bandra and Jogeshwari to avoid having to buy and remove over 100 buildings extant on the planned route This will increase the project cost by 12 billion US 150 million According to Mahesh Kumar general manager of WR the realignment would save money because he estimates that land acquisition and rehabilitation along the stretch would cost over 20 billion US 250 million 28 As a result of the changes 16 6 km of the corridor will now be underground 10 km will run at grade alongside existing tracks and 36 4 km will be elevated 29 The underground sections include the 8 04 km stretch between Oval Maidan and Mahalaxmi and the 8 56 km stretch between Bandra and Jogeshwari that was proposed in the amended plans The at grade section roughly lying between north Santacruz and north Vile Parle is because of restrictions in height placed by the Airports Authority of India 27 The stretches between Dahisar Mira Road Bhayander Vasai and at Virar will also be at grade The remaining stretches will be elevated 30 Initially 26 stations were proposed However WR may cancel 3 or 4 stations to reduce cost and land acquisition Stations that are situated close together or estimated to have low passenger traffic may be dropped from the plan Matunga Road Mahim and Naigaon stations have been proposed to be cancelled 31 The elevated corridor is expected to take 30 of the load off existing lines Western Railway WR intends to fund the project by commercially developing 130 000 square metres of land in 8 locations of which five plots are Mumbai Central Bandra Andheri Mahalaxmi and Borivali The Virar maintenance depot was planned to require 65 hectares of land but the new one will require 40 8 hectares of land due to a decision by WR to reduce the proposed number of coaches on a train from the earlier 15 to 8 32 Oval Maidan station will be integrated with Hutatma Chowk station on the proposed Colaba Bandra line of the Mumbai Metro Stations EditThe line will have 26 stations 5 underground 19 elevated and 2 at grade 33 34 Station name Layout1 Oval Maidan Underground2 Churchgate Underground3 Charni Road Underground4 Mumbai Central Underground5 Mahalaxmi Underground6 Lower Parel Elevated7 Prabhadevi Elevated8 Dadar Elevated9 Matunga Road Elevated10 Mahim Elevated11 Bandra Elevated12 Santacruz Elevated13 Vile Parle Elevated14 Andheri Elevated15 Jogeshwari Elevated16 Goregaon Elevated17 Malad Elevated18 Kandivali Elevated19 Borivali Elevated20 Dahisar Elevated21 Mira Road At grade22 Bhayandar Elevated23 Naigaon At grade24 Vasai Road At grade25 Nala Sopara Elevated26 Virar At gradeExtension EditIndian Railways plans to extend the corridor from Oval Maidan to either Mantralaya or Nariman Point 35 Cost EditThe project is estimated to cost 200 billion US 2 5 billion 36 and will be implemented through a public private partnership PPP mode on Design Build Finance Operate and Transfer DBFOT basis by a private entity 27 The Central Government will provide 20 of the project cost as viability gap funding 30 Infrastructure EditThe rolling stock proposed will consist of 3 660 mm wide air conditioned coaches The corridor will have emergency sidings 27 Operations EditServices will run daily from 5am 12am Trains will be available every 90 seconds and will halt at each station for 30 seconds 27 Trains will be able to transport 90 000 passengers PHPDT Peak Hour Peak Direction Traffic 27 Trains will have an optimum speed of 100 km h 27 Criticism Edit1 The Elevated Railway Corridor has been surveyed to be aligned along the Western Side of the Western Railway Suburban Corridor Not above the existing Railway Lines This means that the Elevated Corridor would duplicate the Existing route and compete for the same passengers 2 Western Railway has vacant land only between Borivali to Jogeshwari and Bandra to Dadar to lay the Pillars of the Elevated Corridor This would mean that Western Railway has to acquire a large number of expensive Multi Storey properties between Jogeshwari and Bandra and Dadar to Churchgate to lay the Elevated Corridor 3 There are many Road over Bridges on the Western Railway tracks between Churchgate and Virar which would have to be crossed over through Double Decker Bridges making them very expensive and complicated 4 Oval Maidan is part of the Mumbai s Art Deco Heritage Precinct and it is highly unlikely that Mumbai Heritage Committee will allow a Railway Terminus on the Iconic Maidan 5 Western Railway would have to construct this immensely expensive project and at the same time maintain the same fare structure as on the existing Sub urban Railway network making this project highly financially unviable Alternatives EditWestern Railway suburban corridor between Churchgate to Virar primarily consists of 4 Tracks 2 slow lines and 2 Fast lines The Fast lines are shared with outstation trains between Mumbai central and Virar A 5th line exists between Mumbai Central to Mahim and Bandra Suburban Railway station East to Borivali via Bandra Terminus BDTS the former used by outstation trains between Mumbai Central to Dadar by trains originating and terminating at Mumbai Central whereas the latter is used by Trains originating and Terminating in Bandra Terminus By constructing a dedicated double line corridor between Mumbai Central and Virar Western Railway can segregate the Suburban Corridor and outstation corridor and thereby increase the number of Local Trains on the Suburban corridor Moreover Railway already owns land for laying a 6th line between Mumbai Central to Borivali and 2 lines between Borivali to Virar On the Western side of the existing tracks between Mumbai Central and Lower Parel On the Eastern side of the existing tracks between Lower Parel and Matunga Road On the Western side of the existing tracks between Matunga Road and Mahim Elevated viaduct above the WEH stretching from Sion Mahim ROB to Khar Subway landing via 5th line between Bandra S and Khar On the Eastern side of the existing tracks between Khar and Kandivali Carshed Clear bottlenecks at Vile parle Level crossing On the Western side of the existing tracks between Kandivali Carshed and Borivali Land for 5th and 6th line on the Western side of the existing tracks between Borivali and Virar Since Railways own most of the land for the 5th and 6th line it would be more cost effective and financially viable vis a vis the Elevated Corridor See also EditCST Panvel Fast Corridor Western Line Mumbai Suburban Railway Mumbai MetroReferences Edit Highlights of the Railway Budget 2007 08 www rediff com Devasia Sanjeev 16 February 2009 First step toward the Mumbai Virar elevated 2 track corridor project Mumbai Mid Day p 1 Retrieved 16 January 2012 India s Western Railway stages bidder briefing for Mumbai rail project Railjournal com 24 August 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Elevated rail corridor gets green light from developers Hindustan Times 24 August 2012 Archived from the original on 25 August 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Officials meet to put elevated railway corridor on fast track The Times of India 18 June 2013 Archived from the original on 29 December 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2013 No movement yet on Oval Maidan Virar Elevated Corridor Indian Express 8 June 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Indian Railways Mumbai elevated rail corridor on track Rail co 16 August 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Elevated Rail Corridor project gets in principle nod Articles economictimes indiatimes com 9 April 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Maharashtra wants centre to fund suburban elevated rail corridor Newstrackindia com 3 May 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Railway s gives ray of hope for Oval Maidan Virar elevated corridor 12 August 2013 Elevated rail corridor project faces further delay Mumbai Mirror a b c d Railway India Technical and Economic Services Elevated rail corridor survey underway Mumbai News Times of India The Times of India 4 January 2014 a b Elevated rail corridor only till Bandra will be unviable Mumbai News Times of India The Times of India 8 April 2014 Mumbai elevated corridor plan on track says railways The Financial Express 5 December 2013 Churchgate Virar corridor ignored the Asian Age www asianage com Archived from the original on 6 March 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2022 Oval Maidan Virar elevated rail corridor After elevating commuters hopes railways ditch proposed corridor 26 April 2014 State govt wants to prioritise Metro Line 3 over Elevated Corridor 16 June 2014 2 elevated rail corridors for Mumbai the Asian Age www asianage com Archived from the original on 15 January 2015 Retrieved 13 January 2022 Railways state government plan to build elevated rail road on same pier Mumbai News Times of India The Times of India 9 January 2015 Elevated rail corridor till Oval Maidan could end at Andheri Mumbai Mirror Mumbai elevated corridor plan falls by wayside 5 May 2015 Andheri Virar elevated rail gets boost Times of India The Times of India 30 March 2016 Retrieved 18 April 2016 Maharashtra CM Fadnavis assures elevated rail corridor plans on track dna 15 August 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2017 Mumbai s elevated rail corridor plans on track but delayed by a year dna 8 November 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2017 Deshpande Umakant 20 December 2017 Piyush Goyal scraps elevated corridor The Asian Age Retrieved 14 January 2019 First step toward the Mumbai Virar elevated 2 track corridor project www mid day com a b c d e f g Oval Maidan Virar elevated rail corridor gets a forward push Indian Express 5 August 2012 Underground suburban stretch to cost WR Rs 1 200 crore more Hindustan Times 4 October 2012 Archived from the original on 4 October 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Sanjeev Devasia 16 October 2012 Help us get land for elevated corridor Railways Dnaindia com Retrieved 27 June 2013 a b Sandeep Ashar 16 October 2012 Western Railways seeks commercial use of land along route to fund new corridor The Times of India Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Manthan K Mehta 7 September 2012 Elevated corridor Few stations may be dropped to cut cost The Times of India Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Binoo Nair 6 April 2013 Your AC train to Virar will have 8 coaches DNA India Retrieved 27 June 2013 Raghvendra Rao 5 August 2012 Oval Maidan Virar elevated rail corridor gets a forward push The Indian Express Retrieved 27 June 2013 Elevated rail corridor stations will have shops and offices Hindustan Times 8 August 2012 Archived from the original on 7 March 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Manthan K Mehta 7 August 2012 Elevated rail corridor may run up to Mantralaya or Nariman Point The Times of India Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2013 Railway dumps metro from Mumbai corridor plan Dnaindia com 4 August 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2013 External links EditProject Information Memorandum Indian Railways Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western railway elevated corridor amp oldid 1153151222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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