Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

For motorists, Sion-panvel road is now highway to hell

- Pranab Jyoti Bhuyan

NAVIMUMBAI: For 24-year-old Pratik Mukherjee, it used to be a oneand-a-half-hour journey on the Sion-panvel Highway from Panvel to his office in Vikhroli. But of late, he has been spending one hour more on the office bus.

“Traffic congestion starts on the road around 7.20 am. Therefore, we have advanced the timing of our bus to avoid the jam. That’s how we are cutting short our onwards travelling time. But there is no respite in the evening,” said Mukherjee, who works at a multi-national company.

Thousands of people from MMR travel via the highway, which is the only road connecting Mumbai to the Mumbai-pune Expressway and the Mumbaigoa Highway.

Mukherjee is not the only commuter who is livid with the crumbling parts of the highway, which witness regular tailbacks. For example, 37-year-old Rajesh Puri does not have a prayer of a smooth commute on the Sionpanvel Higway, resulting in losses to his insurance business.

The Ulwe resident said, “Travelling during peak hours has become next to impossible owing to potholes and traffic snarls. On Monday, I was stuck at Kharghar, and it took me around half-anhour to travel a distance that I normally cover in two minutes.”

“Owing to the poor condition of the road, I avoid travelling on it unless the work is very urgent, even though that takes toll on my profession­al life.”

RM Bhosale, 51, a resident of Kamothe, said he had stopped travelling by car to reach office at Chembur because of potholes. “Now I take a share auto to reach Mansarovar station and hire another auto from Chembur station to my office. I am saving nearly two hours daily,” he said.

Bhosale said a lot of people have switched to autoricksh­aws to save some time.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India