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The 12046 / 45 Chandigarh-New Delhi Shatabdi Express is a Superfast Express train of the Shatabdi category belonging to Indian Railways - Northern Railway zone that runs between Chandigarh and New Delhi in India. It operates as train number 12046 from Chandigarh to New Delhi and as train number 12045 in the reverse direction.
The terminus has 45 departure bus bays, eight idle bus bays, and 13 arrival bus bays, [4] all catering to interstate buses or buses to other ISBTs in Delhi. City bus services, operated by the Delhi Transport Corporation, run from the section known as the DTC Block.
Chandigarh Transport Undertaking (CTU) is the public transport unit of the Chandigarh administration in India. It is managed by the Home Secretary, who acts as transport secretary and director. [ 1 ] It operates a mixed fleet of AC, non AC, mini, midi, and Corona low floor buses.
A second variant, the Outer Mudrika Service (OMS), is the longest route operated by DTC with a length of 105 km (65 mi). It was started in 2002, the same year Delhi Metro began its operations. The service originates from Uttam Nagar Terminal in West Delhi, takes 6 hours to complete its journey, and covers distant parts of Delhi. [1]
The NH 44 or Delhi–Faridabad skyway is a flyover that connects Badarpur in Delhi to Sector-37 in Faridabad on Mathura Road (old NH-2). The toll plaza (border) through which thousands of passengers go to their destinations is called Badarpur border because the nearest area of Delhi which is near to the toll plaza is Badarpur.
A DTC AC CNG Bus A DTC Non-AC CNG Bus. The Delhi Transport Corporation (DTC) is a public sector passenger road transport corporation that manages bus services in Delhi, India.It was incorporated in November 1971 as a wholly-owned corporation of the Government of India to provide an efficient, economical and properly coordinated road transport service in Delhi.
The 22447/22448 New Delhi - Amb Andaura Vande Bharat Express operates 6 days a week, [4] covering a distance of 412 km (256 mi) in a travel time of 5 hrs 15 mins with an average speed of 76–79 km/h (47–49 mph). The Maximum Permissible Speed is 130 km/h (81 mph).
The Delhi–Panipat–Ambala–Kalka line was opened in 1891, [1] and the Chandigarh–Sahnewal line (also referred to as Ludhiana–Chandigarh rail link) was inaugurated in 2013. [2] Ambala–Chandigarh sector was electrified in 1998–99 and Chandigarh–Kalka in 1999–2000. [3]