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There are 16.6 million registered vehicles in the city as of 30 June 2014, which is the highest in the world among all cities, most of which do not follow any pollution emission norm (within municipal limits), while the Delhi metropolitan region has 11.2 million vehicles. Delhi and NCR lose nearly 42 crore (420 million) man-hours every month ...
The metro's total length will exceed 450 kilometres (280 mi) at the end of Phase IV, [100] [88] not including other independently operated systems in the National Capital Region such as the 29.7-kilometre-long (18.5 mi) Aqua Line of the Noida-Greater Noida Metro [101] and the 11.7-kilometre (7.3 mi) Rapid Metro Gurgaon which connect to the ...
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 ...
Children, elderly and people with health conditions advised to stay indoors
Although it used to have traffic lights and at-grade intersections, mushrooming interchanges have reduced the number of lights to just two, and traffic now flows much more smoothly. Several stretches of the Outer Ring Road have been notified as National Highways. [1] Delhi features two ring roads, a main one and an outer one.
Adjusted for its large population, India has approximately 5.13 kilometres (3.19 mi) of roads per 1,000 people, which is much lower than United States 20.5 kilometres (12.7 mi) but higher than that of China 3.6 kilometres (2.2 mi). India's road network carries over 71% of its freight and about 85% of passenger traffic. [4]
The total project value including the land acquisition cost is around ₹1,00,000 crores (~US$13.1 billion). [12] [13] [14] It is expected to be completed by 2026. [15] Delhi–Mumbai Expressway connects the Sohna Elevated Corridor, Delhi to the Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Maharashtra via Dausa, Kota, Ratlam, Vadodara and Surat.
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.