India News | 6.78-lakh Tonnes of Reinforcement Steel to Be Used for Delhi Metro Ph-IV Projects
Get latest articles and stories on India at LatestLY. Civil work being done under the Delhi Metro's Phase IV is expected to consume 6.78 lakh tonnes of reinforcement steel, a DMRC official said on Tuesday.
New Delhi, Aug 18 (PTI) Civil work being done under the Delhi Metro's Phase IV is expected to consume 6.78 lakh tonnes of reinforcement steel, a DMRC official said on Tuesday.
The Union cabinet, in a meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, had in March last year approved three out of the six corridors of the proposed Phase IV, which will further improve connectivity in Delhi.
Also Read | Bengaluru Doctor Arrested by NIA For Allegedly Helping ISIS Terrorists, Booked Under UAPA.
After a long wait, work had begun in December on the construction of the project with a groundbreaking ceremony held at Haider Badli Mor.
"Delhi Metro's Ph-IV work is underway and only three corridors have been approved so far spanning over 60 km, and work on which is underway," DMRC General Manager (Technical) Navneet Kumar Kothari said.
"Steel is a major component in the civil work and, for Ph-IV work, 6,78,000 MT of reinforcement steel is projected to be required," Kothari said.
He was speaking at a thematic webinar hosted by the Confederation of Indian Industry in association with the Ministry of Steel.
The official said the DMRC had an operational span of 391 km with 286 stations.
The approved corridors are -- Mukundpur-Maujpur, R K Ashram-Janakpuri West and Aero City-Tughlaqabad corridors.
Piling work had began for construction of 10 stations of the 28.92-km Janakpuri West-R K Ashram Marg corridor last December.
The other three proposed corridors of Phase IV, which have not yet been approved by the Union cabinet, are Rithala-Bawana-Narela, Inderlok-Indraprastha and Lajpat Nagar-Saket G Block. PTI
(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)