The iconic 103-year-old Y-shaped Byculla Bridge in Mumbai—an essential East-West link since 1922—is set to be replaced by a state-of-the-art cable-stayed bridge. Following a structural audit by IIT-Bombay that deemed the British-era structure unsafe, redevelopment is being undertaken by the Maharashtra Rail Infrastructure Development Corporation (MRIDC), in coordination with the BMC under a 2020 memorandum.
The new bridge, scheduled for completion by March 2026, will feature eight lanes—an upgrade from the existing six—to accommodate increasing traffic. It will span 916 meters, stand 9.7 meters high, and include two arms: one leading to Deccan Merchant Cooperative Bank in Byculla East and the other near the Mumbai Fire Brigade headquarters in Byculla West. A dedicated selfie point will also be created to offer panoramic views of the city.
To minimize traffic disruption, construction is being executed in phases. New segments are being built alongside the existing structure, allowing for a gradual traffic shift before the old bridge is dismantled and partially integrated. The cable-stayed design ensures fewer piers over railway tracks, reducing rail traffic interference.
News by Rahul Yelligetti.