Millennium Post

New corridor will cut commute between Noida & Ggn by 30 mins

- YOGESH KANT

NEW DELHI: The 24.82-km Kalkaji Mandir-janakpuri West stretch of Delhi Metro's Magenta Line was opened on Monday, which will bring domestic terminal of the city airport on the DMRC network and cut travel time between Noida and Gurgaon by at least 30 minutes.

Union Minister for Housing and Urban Affairs (Independen­t Charge) Hardeep Singh Puri and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal inaugurate­d the corridor at Nehru Enclave metro station.

Speaking on the occasion, Kejriwal said that the Delhi government would soon decide on the delayed Phase IV of the Metro network.

With the opening of this section, the total operationa­l span of the Delhi Metro Rail Corporatio­n (DMRC) network has reached to 277 km, officials said.

Passenger services on the segment, which has 16 stations — 14 undergroun­d, two elevated — will begin from tomorrow at 6 am from Kalkaji Mandir and Janakpuri West stations simultaneo­usly.

After the inaugurati­on, the dignitarie­s travelled in a train to the Hauz Khas metro station.

At 29 metres, the five-level new Hauz Khas station is the deepest metro station in the entire network and an engineerin­g landmark as its tunnel goes beneath that of the existing station on Yellow Line.

Hauz Khas (with Yellow Line) and Janakpuri West (with Blue Line) stations are the interchang­e facilities on this corridor, besides the exist- ing Kalkaji Mandir station (with Violet Line).

This section is also the longest stretch to have been opened so far in the DMRC'S Phase-iii project.

With the opening of this stretch, the entire Janakpuri West-botanical Garden Magenta Line corridor, covering the city's arterial Outer Ring Road, has become operationa­l.

Terminal 1 of the IGI Airport has also been connected to the metro network through this corridor, with an eponymous station on it.

On December 25, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurate­d the 12.64-km-long stretch of the Magenta Line's Botanical Garden-kalkaji Mandir corridor, cutting down the travel time between Noida and parts of south Delhi by more than 30 minutes. Now, with the opening of the remainder of the Magenta Line, the travel time between Noida and Gurgaon will shrink by at least 30 minutes.

"After the inaugurati­on of this vital link, the approximat­e time to commute between HUDA City Centre (end of Yellow Line on Gurgaon side) and Botanical Garden (on Blue Line in Noida) stations will be about 50 minutes," a DMRC official said.

"Currently, a metro journey from HUDA City Centre to Botanical Garden takes about an hour and a half with the interchang­e at Rajiv Chowk station," they said.

The corridor will operate with 24 trains which will gradually increase to 26 apart from the operating reserves.

The frequency will be 5 minutes and 15 seconds during peak hours through the whole section and if passenger traffic demands shorter intermedia­te loops with higher rate will be introduced after studying the traffic pattern, they said.

The Delhi Metro is also touting the Magenta Line as a 'Knowledge Corridor' as four major universiti­es of the Delhi-national Capital Region (NCR), have been connected on it.

The Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) are the institutio­ns which will get metro connectivi­ty with the opening of the new corridor and Jamia Milia Islamia University in south Delhi and Amity University in Noida have already got metro connectivi­ty with the opening of the Botanical Garden Kalkaji Mandir section in December last year.

 ?? PIC/MPOST ?? Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri, along with Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal and DMRC chief Mangu Singh take a ride in metro in Magenta line on Monday
PIC/MPOST Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri, along with Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal and DMRC chief Mangu Singh take a ride in metro in Magenta line on Monday

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