The Free Press Journal

MAROL NAKA TRAFFIC: A COMMUTER’S NIGHTMARE

The four way intersecti­on of Andheri-Kurla road and Marol-Marushi road lacks proper traffic management and has dysfunctio­nal signals

- PRATIP ACHARYA

In the absence of any semblance of traffic management in the area, the four-way intersecti­on of Andheri-Kurla Road and Marol-Maroshi Road in Andheri East has become a chronic traffic congestion spot, with commutes through the junction becoming a nightmare for residents in the area and those who have to pass through on their daily route.

During a spot visit by the Free Press Journal during peak hours on Tuesday morning, there was not a single onduty traffic policeman at the busy intersecti­on, and the lone traffic signal was not operationa­l.

As a result, vehicular movement in all four directions – vehicles coming from Sakinaka and turning into Marol Maroshi Road; traffic from Chakala and Airport Road heading into Marol-Maroshi Road, motorists exiting Marol-Maroshi Road and those crossing Marol Naka to head straight down Andheri Kurla Road towards Sakinaka – was taking place simultaneo­usly, leading to near-collisions and holding up traffic flow.

Moreover, there was an absence of any zebra crossings marked at the junction, and senior citizens and school children could be seen crossing the busy intersecti­on while taking significan­t risks.

While traffic diversions are in place for traffic heading out of Military Road not to exit at Marol Naka, a temporary oneway ramp necessitat­ed by undergound metro constructi­on work actually sees traffic in both directions.

Both Andheri-Kurla Road and Marol-Maroshi Road are busy thoroughfa­res that see high traffic volume through the day. It provides crucial east-west connectivi­ty, and is used by those heading from Ghatkopar and other eastern suburbs to the airport.

Traffic congestion in the area has been an issue since 2017, due to the constructi­on work on the Metro-3 route. However, the problem is exacerbate­d by lack of any traffic management, and the absence of a working traffic signal to regulate traffic flow. Autoricksh­aw drivers idling near the Marol naka metro station’s exits are another cause of traffic snarls.

According to regular commuters, due to congestion at Marol Naka junction, travel from Military Road to Marol Naka, which should take 10 minutes, actually takes at least 40 minutes.

“Due to the absence of traffic police and traffic lights, there is complete pandemoniu­m during the wee hours of the day. Nobody adheres to the traffic laws and sneaks in from wherever they get any space,” said IT profession­al Sanjay Gupte, who drives regularly between Marol and Kurla. Gupte said the lack of any zebra crossing tends to make the road more accidentpr­one as people tend to cross the road haphazardl­y. Vaishali Pandey who takes her daughter every day to Marol's St. John's school said that when the school gets over each afternoon, there is severe congestion on the road, due to the mismanagem­ent at the traffic intersecti­on. She claimed two minor accidents had also taken place at the spot in the recent past.

Owner of a 15-year-old stationery shop at the Marol Maroshi Road, Deepak Kumar said that often ambulances heading to Seven Hills Hospital get stuck in the congestion. “Two months back, a person died in an ambulance as it failed to reach the hospital on time. The road is meant to be one-way but as there is no police or traffic lights, vehicles from both sides keep coming in,” said Kumar.

Marol-based export manager, Ravi Nair has been writing to the officials of Mumbai Police (Traffic) and Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) for more than five years urging them to take immediate action on the traffic situation. Nair told FPJ he had written to and met the DCP (Traffic) in 2017, who assured immediate resolution to the problem, which failed to materialis­e. “It seems we are a reactive country and not a pro-active one. We only tend to react to situations when someone dies. The reason there had been no reaction from the authoritie­s so far is because there has been no major accident,” said Nair.

According to Nair, local residents had earlier urged the local authoritie­s to deploy traffic policemen at least during school hours, but no one paid heed.

When contacted, the local BJP corporator Sunil Yadav refrained from comment. “The signal is non-operationa­l due to ongoing metro work," said Sanjay Narvekar, Senior Police Inspector, Sahar Traffic division under which Marol naka falls. He claimed that traffic policemen are deployed at the junction.

The Marol Maroshi Road is meant to be one-way, but vehicles from both sides tend to pass in a mismanaged way because there is no police surveillan­ce. In the last two months, two schoolchil­dren suffered injuries due to the uncontroll­ed traffic.

- A LOCAL RESIDENT

 ?? PIC BY BL SONI ??
PIC BY BL SONI

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