Hindustan Times (Jammu)

World’s highest rail bridge on Chenab gets ‘golden joint’

- Ravi Krishnan Khajuria ravi.khajuria@htlive.com

Just two days before India’s 75th Independen­ce Day, the world’s highest rail bridge over the Chenab river in the Kouri area of Reasi district, the much-awaited engineerin­g marvel, achieved another milestone when the overarch deck of the bridge was completed with a golden joint on Saturday.

The golden joint shall now pave the way for engineers to lay tracks on the bridge. With tracks over it, Kashmir will be linked with the rest of India via rail network for the first time since Independen­ce.

Surender Mahi, chief administra­tive officer of the USBRL Konkan Railways said, “It was a very big project for all of us. To reach here we had to construct 26 km of approach roads having bridges and tunnels”. Mahi said that the engineers faced several challenges but at last gifted engineerin­g marvel to the people of India. “In the 90 days pending works of the bridge shall be completed and by next two years, i.e, by December 2024, the train will pass over this bridge on way to Srinagar. The work on rail tracks beyond this bridge (Bakkal) towards Srinagar is already on,” said Mahi. “To achieve this feat, we had sought technical expertise from IIT-Roorkee, IIT-Delhi, Indian Institute of Sciences, Bangalore, DRDO, national remote sensing agency, GSI and other agencies. This is the highest railway arch in the world. The bridge is 35 meters higher than Eiffel Tower,” he said.

“The deck has been completed today with the golden joint and now track will be laid. Thereafter, trolleys will be used for trial runs. Control rooms will be set up,” he said. He informed that the cost of the project was Rs 1,450 crore.

Sanjay Gupta, chairman and MD, Konkan Railways, said, “This has been a long journey. The term ‘ golden joint’ was coined by civil engineers… It’s the world’s highest railway bridge.” “We can confidentl­y say that the bridge would be roughly 98 per cent complete after the golden joint is finished,” said Giridhar Rajagopala­n, deputy managing director of Afcons.

“When we completed the arch closure project last year, we felt a great sense of relief about our ability to complete the project accurately so that there was no mismatch,” he added.

Another official said the entire 111-km Katra-Banihal rail project faced delays due to challenges like young Himalayan terrain, a tectonical­ly active area with faults and folds.

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