Darjeeling, Aug. 17.TT: A stretch on NH55 blocked at Tindharia for nearly a year because of landslides is set to be repaired after the Pujas.
The Centre, which will fund the
project, has accepted the proposal for repairs by a Delhi-based
consultancy firm for the NH55 stretch in Tindharia. The highway links
Darjeeling with Siliguri.
The LEA Associates
South Asia Pvt Ltd (LASA) has suggested the construction of a concrete
wall along the mountainside. The ministry of surface transport has sent
the Rs 57-crore proposal to the state government for its comments.
Traffic along the
Siliguri-Kurseong section of NH55 has been closed since June 2010
because of landslides at Tindharia and Paglajhora.
Nirmal Mondal, an
executive engineer of the public works department (national highway
division IX), today said: “The comments will be sent to the ministry by
Tuesday. The proposal is for the Tindharia stretch and according to the
proposal, Rs 57 crore would be needed to repair the stretch.”
The Centre has
already sanctioned Rs 63 lakh for repairs of the highway at Paglajhora.
“Work on the Paglajhora stretch will start from the next week,” Mondal
said.
The 500m stretch
at Paglajhora was washed away in a landslide on June 16, 2010, after
which the highway has been shut between Siliguri and Kurseong.
The Darjeeling
Himalayan Railway also stopped running toy trains along the route as the
tracks, which run parallel to the highway, were also destroyed.
Another stretch of
the highway, also called Hill Cart Road, was hit by landslides at
Tindharia on September 28, 2011. Nearly 150m were washed away. Another
slide destroyed the Hill Cart Road on July 19, 2012.
The National
Highways Authority of India hopes that once the state sends its comments
on the stability and cost of repairs at Tindharia, work would commence
after the Pujas. Mondal said LASA had proposed to build the road without
going for the construction of a tunnel or realignment of the route.
Once the road is
completed, the DHR can also breathe a sigh of relief. “The major work
lies with the national highway authorities. If they repair the road, we,
too, can start restoring the tracks,” said M.D. Bhutia, director, DHR.
The repair would
help the DHR in another way. Its 100-year-old workshop at Tindharia is
perched precariously 200m above the stretch of NH55 that had caved in
last year. “We are ensuring that the DHR engines are in running
condition by doing on-site repairs, but inaccessibility to the workshop
means we cannot do any elaborate maintenance work,” Bhutia said.
The closure of the
highway has been a huge problem to the local people for the last two
years. “Tindharia has three high schools and a railway hospital. People
from areas like Mahanadi, Gayabari and Chunabatti are being forced to
use a circuitous route through Kurseong and Sukna to reach Tindharia. We
have to shell out Rs 100 to travel between Mahanadi and Tindharia,
instead of Rs 20,” said P. Giri, a resident of the area.
With the closure
of NH55, heavy vehicles ferrying essential commodities from Siliguri to
Darjeeling are being forced to use the circuitous route of Mungpoo and
Mirik.
This has led to escalation of the prices of essential commodities in the hills.
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