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Home > Mumbai > Mumbai News > Article > Mumbai Coastal Road will have dedicated control room

Mumbai Coastal Road will have dedicated control room

Updated on: 09 February,2024 07:01 AM IST  |  Mumbai
Sameer Surve | sameer.surve@mid-day.com

Specialised staff to monitor movement of traffic; PM to inaugurate 1st phase

Mumbai Coastal Road will have dedicated control room

The total lane count is eight on the Coastal Road, with the tunnel road having six lanes. Pic/Satej Shinde

Key Highlights

  1. BMC has decided to set up a special disaster control room for Coastal Road
  2. The control room will have dedicated staff
  3. After the completion of the project, the work of setting up the control room will start

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has decided to set up a special disaster control room for the Worli to Nariman Point Coastal Road. The control room will have dedicated staff who will keep a close eye on the traffic. Chief Engineer of the Coastal Road project M M Swami told mid-day that the Coastal Road will have a dedicated control room separate from the current civic disaster control room.


After the completion of the project, the work of setting up the control room will start. “We will set up a temporary control room till the permanent control room is ready. There will be dedicated staff for the control room,” Swami added. This team will keep watch on coastal road movement, especially in the tunnel, Swami added.


“The speed of the vehicle will be 80 km per hour. There is provision for CCTV on full roads, including tunnels. There will be CCTV installed at every 100 metres, which will monitor speed violations and disasters too,” said the official.


Municipal Commissioner I S Chahal said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate the first part of the project on February 19, 2024. “The southbound traffic from Worli to Nariman Point will open. The full project will open by mid-May 2024,” Chahal said during the budget speech.

According to the BMC official, the Worli to Nariman Point south channel is completed, with some miscellaneous work pending. Meanwhile, the work on the north channel and the connector between the Coastal Road and Bandra Worli Sea Link is in the final stage and will be completed in May. 

According to BMC documents, the Worli to Nariman Point Coastal Road is an 18.58-km-long project costing R13,983.83 crore, including all taxes and services. The total lane count is eight, with the tunnel road having six lanes, including a dedicated bus lane. The tunnel from Priyadarshini Park to Nariman Point is 2.19 km. BMC had made a provision of R2,900 crore in the budget of 2024-25.

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