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Delhi and NCR lose nearly 42 crore (420 million) man-hours every month while commuting between home and office through public transport, due to the traffic congestion. [3] Therefore, serious efforts, including a number of transport infrastructure projects, are under way to encourage usage of public transport in the city. [4]
Speed limits in the city of Mysore, Karnataka. Speed limits in India vary by state and vehicle type. In April 2018, the Union Ministry of Road Transport and Highways fixed the maximum speed limit on expressways at 120 km/h, for national highways at 110 km/h, and for urban roads at 70 km/h for M1 category of vehicles.
National Highway 2 (NH 2), commonly referred as Delhi-Kolkata Road is a busy Indian National Highway that runs through the states of Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, and West Bengal. It constitute a major portion of historical Grand Trunk Road along with NH 91 and NH 1 in India.
As of 2024, the longest expressway in India is the partially-opened Delhi–Mumbai Expressway (Phase-III) at 1,015 km (631 mi), which was opened in December 18, 2024, [5] and the widest expressway is the Delhi – Gurgaon section of the Dwarka Expressway with 16 lanes, which was opened in 2024.
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 ...
Since Delhi would benefit from rerouting the vehicular away from it, Delhi state agreed to bear half of the land acquisition cost of the expressway. [18] In 2006, the Haryana government began work on Western Peripheral Expressway project, [ 19 ] when the tender was awarded to KMP Expressways ltd. with commercial operations supposed to begin in ...
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 ...
The Delhi–Karnal Regional Rapid Transit System (Delhi–Karnal RRTS) is an approved, 135 km (84 mi) long, semi-high speed rail corridor connecting Delhi, Sonipat, Panipat, and Karnal in the National Capital Region.