Virar Alibaug Multimodal Corridor Route Map !full! ❲99% Deluxe❳
The corridor hugs the eastern flank of Navi Mumbai. At , it links to the upcoming Navi Mumbai International Airport (NMIA). The map here is dense: a "Transport City." Trains from Virar will terminate at a station directly connected to the airport's check-in concourse. Passengers walk 200 meters from the high-speed rail platform to the security hold.
The map is still a blueprint on a wall in the MMRDA office. But soon, it will be the spine of a new Mumbai—one that lives around the island, not just on it. And the story of the Virar-Alibaug Multimodal Corridor will be the tale of how the city finally learned to breathe. virar alibaug multimodal corridor route map
Just before , a brand-new, 8-km bridge appears on the map—a feeder arm connecting the VAMC directly to the Atal Bihari Vajpayee Sewri–Nhava Sheva Sea Link . This is the masterstroke. A car from Virar can now reach downtown Mumbai in 45 minutes without ever touching a traffic light . The corridor hugs the eastern flank of Navi Mumbai
The plan, first drawn on tired government blueprints, was audacious: a 126-km-long, 8-lane expressway, flanked by a dedicated rail corridor, running from the northern suburb of Virar to the southern port town of Alibaug. It wouldn't just bypass Mumbai. It would unburden it. Passengers walk 200 meters from the high-speed rail
The map curves south-east, skirting the Sanjay Gandhi National Park’s northern edge. Instead of bulldozing the hills, the corridor burrows. Twin tunnels, each 6 km long, pass under the Tungareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary. On the map, this stretch is marked in dark green—"Eco-Sensitive Zone."