Agra Etawah Toll Road Project
To build, operate, and maintain the Agra Etawah Bypass NH 2 Project, the NHAI and AETPL (AE Tollway Private Limited) (a Concessionaire), an SPV of IRB Infrastructure Developers Ltd., entered into a Concession Agreement on September 1, 2015. The Project's concession period extends much beyond the Appointed Date. During this time, the concessionaire is allowed to collect the recommended client expense from the traveling public.
AETPL was given permission to expand a 124.52 km section of NH 2 in Uttar Pradesh from four to six lanes on a BOT or DBFOT basis.
The section of NH 2 from kilometer 199.66 to km 323.525 is part of the Agra Etawah Toll Road Project.
The Features of the project are listed below:
124.52 kilometers of six-lane highway
750 Lane km
Administration road for 84.725 kilometers
Slip road length of 30.282 km
three important expansions
thirty small expansions
7 overheads
Seven rail route overpasses
3.08 km obstacles due to commotion
44.68 km of the route are illuminated by streetlights.
214 classes
twelve automobile underpasses
10 light-duty underpasses
6 pedestrian underpasses
In 164 convergences
4 truck stoppages
22 straight transport lanes
2 toll-expense courts - acceptable FASTag
The project's cost is Rs. 3,244 Cr.
The concession period is 24 years.
Passageway portrayal:
The busy National Highway 2, also known as the Delhi-Kolkata Road, passes through the states of Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, and West Bengal.
The Agra Etawah Toll Road Project is crucial for the NHAI's most ambitious and well-known Golden Quadrilateral project. The road project passes through the Uttar Pradesh cities of Agra, Firozabad, Mainpuri, and Etawah. The course covers significant urban areas in Agra, Etmadpur, Firozabad, Shikohabad, Jaswantnagar, and Etawah.
With the Taj Mahal, Fatehpur Sikri, and Red Post as three world-famous landmarks, Agra is a prominent location on the map of the travel industry. The fourth world-famous attraction is the bird sanctuary at Bharatpur National Park. Itmad-ud Daula's final resting place and Akbar's Tomb in Sikandra have both been suggested as potential world legacy sites.