BDA steel flyover Detailed Project Report, traffic simulation

BDA releases the Detailed Project Report (DPR) and traffic simulations for the controversial steel flyover project.

Owing to public pressure, Bengaluru Development Authority (BDA) has uploaded more details on the steel flyover, including the Detailed Project Report (DPR) of the BDA’s proposed steel flyover from Chalukya Circle to Hebbalon Bellary Road late on Friday night (October 14, 2016). The same information was earlier denied when Namma Bengaluru Foundation had applied for it under RTI.

3D animation for the proposed project:

2D simulation video for the proposed project:

Link to the video: https://www.youtube.com/embed/Caq0Swx_46M

Here is the copy of the Detailed Project Report.

[embeddoc url=”https://citizenmatters.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/BDA-Detailed-Project-Report.pdf” download=”all”]

More clarifications on the project

[embeddoc url=”https://citizenmatters.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Update-on-the-Elevated-Road.pdf” download=”all”]

List of trees to be cut in BDA steel flyover project

[embeddoc url=”https://citizenmatters.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/List-of-Plantation-Trees.pdf” download=”all”]

Integration plan at Hebbal Junction

[embeddoc url=”https://citizenmatters.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/INTEGRATION-PLAN-17-10-2016.pdf” download=”all”]

Source: http://bdabangalore.org/ElevatedRoad.html

Related Articles

BDA keeps steel flyover on hold after drawing flak from citizens
Steel flyover debate: Let a plan drive the city transport
Open letter to BBPAG members on steel flyover
BDA steel flyover tender documents
BDA botches up the steel flyover issue by hiding information

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Civil society groups push for cleaner, safer and accessible transport in TN cities

The Tamil Nadu Urban Mobility Charter 2031 urges more buses, EV adoption, and safer streets to make cities equitable and people-first.

A collective of active citizens, non-governmental organisations, sustainable transport experts, and other stakeholders has called for strengthening the public transport network in Tamil Nadu's cities, making it accessible to all and creating low-emission zones across urban centres. The Sustainable Mobility Network (SMN), a coalition of over 30 civil society organisations across India, has released the 'Tamil Nadu Urban Mobility Charter 2031', a comprehensive roadmap urging political parties and governments to put sustainable mobility at the heart of the state’s development agenda. The Charter was shaped through a multi-stakeholder roundtable convened by ITDP India, Citizen consumer and civic Action Group (CAG),…

Similar Story

Freebies or freedom? What bus subsidies do for Indian women

Free bus travel for women in Indian cities cuts transport costs by 50 per cent and boosts jobs. Watch this interview to know more.

Across Indian cities, women depend heavily on buses to get to work, school, healthcare, and to manage everyday caregiving. In recent years, several states have introduced women-specific bus fare subsidy schemes. Delhi, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu offer completely free rides for women in state-run buses, while Maharashtra offers 50% subsidy. Read more: Who benefits from the free bus for women scheme? These schemes have been both vilified as 'freebies' or touted as transformative solutions for women’s mobility. But do these schemes actually work? In 2025, the Sustainable Mobility Network commissioned a study to answer this very question. Beyond Free Rides…