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The Dhaula Kuan metro station is located on the Delhi Airport Express Line of the Delhi Metro. The solitary elevated station on the Airport Express Line, it features check-in facilities as well. [1] This station did not begin operations with the rest of the Airport Express Line, and initially, trains passed through without stopping.
The Airport Express Line or Orange Line is a Delhi Metro line from New Delhi to Yashobhoomi Dwarka Sector - 25, linking Indira Gandhi International Airport.The total length of the line is 22.7 km (14.1 mi), [2] of which 15.7 km (9.8 mi) is underground [3] and 7.0 km (4.3 mi), from Buddha Jayanti Park to Mahipalpur, elevated.
Dhaula Kuan fly-overs. Five major thoroughfares in Delhi meet at Dhaula Kuan. Passing Through the intersection are the Ring Road and National Highway 8, which feed traffic around Delhi and from Central Delhi to Gurgaon, and points south and southwest, respectively.
The 32-lane, now-removed toll gate at the Delhi–Gurgaon border was the largest in South Asia and the second largest in Asia. [1] Expressway also connects both cities with the airport The Delhi–Gurugram Expressway on NH-48 is a 27.7 km (17.2 mi) six to eight lane [ 2 ] expressway connecting the national capital, Delhi and the Millennium city ...
The station was inaugurated on 23 February 2011. [1]The Airport Express Line itself is a 22.7-kilometer (14.1 miles) stretch, designed to offer fast, reliable transport between New Delhi Railway Station and Dwarka Sector 21 via the Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGI).
Time zone: UTC+5:30 : Welcome ... The road connecting two said cities is referred to as Old Delhi-Gurgaon Road. ... To New Delhi metro station via Dhaula Kuan (Bus No ...
NH 148A (Mehrauli-Gurgaon Highway) Chhatarpur Mandir: IGNOU: Neb Sarai: Saket G-Block. ... Dhaula Kuan: Domestic Departure T-1 Parking: Domestic Arrival Connections.
The Pink Line has the highest point of the Delhi Metro at Dhaula Kuan with a height of 23.6 metres (77 ft), passing over the Dhaula Kuan grade separator flyovers and the Airport Express Line. [2] It also possesses the country's smallest metro station, Ashram , with a size of just 151.6 metres (497 ft) against the usual 265 metres (869 ft).