Bengaluru's Rs 1.5 Lakh Crore Plan: New Township, Tunnels & Elevated Corridors

Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar has announced a comprehensive roadmap to decongest Bengaluru, headlined by the revival of a planned township at Bidadi. The plan includes massive infrastructure projects like a 109 km elevated corridor, 300 km of buffer roads, and the exploration of costly tunnel roads within the city. The government is streamlining waste management and preparing projects worth Rs 1.5 lakh crore, including expanding the Metro network to 350 km. Shivakumar acknowledged the severe congestion, attributing it to roads occupying only 8% of the city's land area while accommodating 1.3 crore vehicles.

Key Points: Karnataka's Plan to Decongest Bengaluru with New Township & Tunnels

  • New township at Bidadi to ease pressure
  • 109 km elevated corridor & 300 km buffer roads
  • Tunnel roads as a key long-term solution
  • Metro expansion to 350 km network
3 min read

Karnataka govt outlines plans to decongest Bengaluru​

Deputy CM D.K. Shivakumar outlines a massive infrastructure push for Bengaluru, including a Bidadi township, tunnel roads, and 109 km elevated corridor.

"Projects worth Rs 1.5 lakh crore are being prepared to transform Bengaluru into a world-class city. - D.K. Shivakumar"

Bengaluru, March 26

Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar, who is also Bengaluru Development Minister, on Thursday outlined an ambitious roadmap to decongest Bengaluru, including the development of a township at Bidadi, elevated corridors, tunnel roads, and expansion of Metro services, while responding to a discussion on Greater Bengaluru in the Legislative Assembly.​

Responding to BJP MLA S. Suresh Kumar's suggestion to develop alternative cities outside Bengaluru, Shivakumar said the government has revived plans to build a township at Bidadi to ease pressure on the city.​

He noted that similar proposals at Nandagudi, Solur, and Bidadi were dropped earlier, but the government has now decided to proceed. ​

He said that since Bidadi has adequate water facilities, the township will be developed there, adding that the proposal to build an AI City on 8,000 acres will be discussed in the Cabinet. ​

He also reiterated that a second airport for Bengaluru must come up in the southern region.​

Addressing waste management issues, Shivakumar alleged that the previous government failed to effectively tackle the "garbage mafia." ​

He said the current government has streamlined waste management contracts from 89 packages to 33 and brought them to the final stage. ​

While four sites were initially identified for waste disposal, the plan has now been finalised for two locations due to land constraints, including NICE land and an existing site at Doddaballapura.​

On infrastructure, Shivakumar announced that a 109 km elevated corridor project will be launched soon. He also revealed plans to construct 300 km of buffer roads along stormwater drains, with partial land support from the Defence Ministry. ​

A double-decker road model, already implemented in Jayanagar, will be expanded to 40 km, with costs to be shared between Bengaluru Metro Rail Corporation Limited and the Bengaluru civic body.​

Highlighting the scale of planned investments, he said projects worth Rs 1.5 lakh crore are being prepared to transform Bengaluru into a world-class city. The Metro network is set to expand to 350 km in the coming years.​

Shivakumar acknowledged that traffic congestion remains a major challenge but argued that Bengaluru is often singled out despite worse conditions in cities like Mumbai, Hyderabad, and Delhi. ​

He pointed out that roads account for only 8 per cent of the city's land, making expansion difficult, especially after the 2013 land acquisition law, which mandated higher compensation.​

To address this, the government is pushing the Bengaluru Business Corridor project, for which 80 per cent of land acquisition for the first phase has been approved. Tenders will be invited soon, and the project is expected to significantly reduce congestion. ​

He also thanked HUDCO for offering Rs 26,000 crore in funding.​

Additionally, Shivakumar emphasised the need for tunnel roads, stating that they are the only viable solution within the city. ​

He said construction could cost around Rs 700-800 crore per km, significantly lower than in other states, and would play a key role in easing traffic in the long term.​

He said that earlier, when he was a Minister, Bengaluru's population was 70 lakh, and today it has grown to 1.04 crore. The city now has 1.30 crore vehicles. He agreed that traffic congestion is a serious issue.​

He added that in most major cities in the country, roads account for about 16 per cent of the total area and are relatively wider. ​

However, since Bengaluru is not a planned city, roads constitute only 8 per cent of its area. Within this limited 8 per cent, as many as 1.30 crore vehicles have to ply, leading to severe congestion.​

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Rs 1.5 lakh crore is a staggering number. While the vision is grand, I'm skeptical. We've heard big promises before. The real test is on-ground delivery and managing corruption in such massive contracts.
A
Arjun K
Tunnel roads at 700-800 crore per km? That sounds incredibly expensive. Will this money be better spent on improving last-mile connectivity for the Metro and better public bus services? We need sustainable solutions, not just more roads for cars.
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Sarah B
As someone who moved here for work, the traffic is the single biggest drain on productivity and quality of life. Expanding the Metro to 350 km is the most critical piece. Hope they prioritize that over everything else.
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Vikram M
Good to see focus on waste management too. The garbage problem is as visible as the traffic. Streamlining contracts is a start, but we need better segregation at source and processing. Can't just keep finding new dumping grounds.
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Karthik V
The statistic says it all: 8% road area for 1.3 crore vehicles. We need a multi-pronged approach - satellite townships, massive public transport push, AND strict regulations on vehicle density in core areas. All talk of just building more roads is futile.

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