Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
National Highway Development Project will close by first half of 2018, with the launch of Bharatmala project. [6] 10,000 km of highway construction left under NHDP will be merged with Phase I of the Bharatmala. [6] Sagarmala and Setu Bharatam are also expected to fill in the void created by closure of NHDP project. [citation needed]
The National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL) is a Public Sector Enterprise(PSE) created by the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH), Government of India in the year 2014 to build highways in technical challenging and high altitude regions of the Northeast India, Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir ...
In 1998 India launched a massive program of highway upgrades, called the National Highways Development Project (NHDP), in which the main north–south and east–west corridors and highways connecting the four metropolitan cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata) have been fully paved and widened into four-lane highways. Some of the busier ...
Bharatmala is an ecosystem of road development which includes tunnels, bridges, elevated corridors, flyovers, overpass, interchanges, bypasses, ring roads etc. to provide shortest & optimized connectivity to multiple places, it is a centrally-sponsored and funded road and highways project of the Government of India [6] with a target of ...
The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) is a ministry of the Government of India, that is the apex body for formulation and administration of the rules, regulations and laws relating to road transport, transport research and in also to increase the mobility and efficiency of the road transport system in India.
In India, this is the network of roads maintained by the state governments. These roads are constructed and managed by the states' Public Works Department . The state highways are usually roads that link important cities, towns and district headquarters within the state and connect them with National Highways or state highways of neighbouring ...
National Highway 73 (India) National Highway 75 (India) National Highway 77 (India) National Highway 79 (India) National Highway 81 (India) National Highway 83 (India) National Highway 85 (India) National Highway 87 (India) National Highway 102 (India) National Highway 102A (India) National Highway 102B (India) National Highway 102C (India)
At 0.66 km of highway per square kilometre of land the density of India's highway network is higher than that of the United States (0.65) and far higher than that of China's (0.16) or Brazil's (0.20). [1] India has a network of National Highways connecting all the major cities and state capitals, forming the economic backbone of the country.