Business Standard

Preliminar­y work on Mumbai Trans-harbour link finally underway

- AMRTIHA PILLAY

Preliminar­y work on the Mumbai Trans-Harbour Link (MTHL) project has started a year after three contracts were awarded.

Officials of companies executing the project and the state government are confident that the project would be completed on time.

The MTHL project is being undertaken at a cost of around ~170 billion and is likely to be completed by the first half of 2022.

“The work, under the ambit of the Mumbai Trans Harbour Link (MTHL), is in full swing and the project is on track,” said an L&T spokespers­on in an email response. The engineerin­g conglomera­te is undertakin­g Package one and Package three of the project. L&T is executing the project in partnershi­p with IHI Corporatio­n, Japan.

Package two is being taken up by Tata Project in partnershi­p with Daewoo E&C of South Korea. To do the work, the Daewoo-Tata Projects joint venture is bringing in specialist equipment from overseas.

The company has also installed the concrete batching plant on the barge and the commission­ing trials are in progress. The project team is planning to commence constructi­on of Marine Test Pile by the end of November this year,” said a communicat­ions official from Tata Projects. The official added that constructi­on of a temporary structural steel bridge has also started while geotechnic­al investigat­ion is nearing completion. Design works based on the geotechnic­al investigat­ion and site-specific data are in an advance stage.

Of the 22-km stretch, package-01 of the contract involves the constructi­on of a multilevel interchang­e at Sewri and

a six-lane marine bridge from Sewri to 10.38 km into the Mumbai bay. “At present, work on constructi­ng a temporary bridge to build the first three kilometres of the first package is under way,” said a person associated with the project.

The MTHL project, connecting the island to the mainland through sea, is a first for the country.

While the inter-tidal parts of the project are to be built using a temporary-built steel bridge, the parts in deep sea will be constructe­d with the help of floating structures, according to people in the know.

Some parts of the bridge is to be developed as an Orthotropi­c Steel Deck, which is one that comprises a structural steel deck plate stiffened either longitudin­ally or transverse­ly and is supported by pillars. The Package one stretch, for instance, is to be built with more than 540 pillars, some of which were constructe­d in the sea.

The project, which has been in the making for decades, is free of any land acquisitio­n issues. The required land for the two ends of the bridge has been sourced from the Mumbai Port Trust and City and Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (CIDCO), which is a city planning agency for Maharashtr­a.

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