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Five years ago on 20 October 2011, south India's first metro rail service commenced in Bengaluru, covering a 6.7 km stretch between Mahatma Gandhi Road and Baiyappanahalli, the first open section of Namma Metro Phase 1.
Serving a small section of Bengaluru’s population, the metro served a commuter population of just 41.66 lakh in 2011-12. From there, the number of commuters has risen up to 2.47 crore in 2016 (till September).
The number of commuters dropped sometime after the services first began, and only increased after the launch of the entire east-west corridor, i.e. from Baiyappanahalli to Mysore Road.
While talking to the Bangalore Mirror, Pradeep Singh Kharola, MD of BMRCL said,
The total cost of building the entire first phase of Namma Metro is Rs 13,800 crore.
During its first year of operations, the Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) made Rs 6.17 crore in revenue. This amount has shot up to Rs 51.16 crore in 2016-17 (till September.)
Bangalore Mirror states that the BMRCL made profits of Rs 41 lakh and Rs 3.71 crore in its first and second year of operations respectively.
Since then, however, the body has been incurring losses due to operations of metro in smaller reaches; it suffered Rs 60 crore loss in the last financial year.
Earlier this year, the Purple Line or the East-West corridor of the BMRCL — an 18-km path stretching from Byapanahalli to Nayandahalli – was inaugurated.
Kharola told IANS that the 5.12 km underground stretch on the East-West corridor of the first underground metro in south India took four long years to complete, as builders encountered very hard rock requiring nearly 10,000 controlled explosions to remove.
The operation on the entire Phase 1 network, which is 42.3 km long, is yet to begin completely.
The metro line between Sampige Road and Yelachenahalli is being delayed reportedly because the underground stretch between Sampige Road and KR Market stations is lagging behind schedule.
Phase II, expected to be completed by 2020, will cost Rs 26,405 crore.
During the inauguration of the Purple Line, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said,
He added that survey work for phase-III had begun.
It was in 2006 that the Phase-I of the Namma Metro project sanctioned and the service was expected to ease the traffic burden in the city.
However, its impact on easing traffic congestion in the city is yet to be fully measured.
A study found that traffic congestion on some of the major roads and parking lots in western Bengaluru had decreased by 15%, Deccan Herald reported. A senior police officer told the paper that the Metro service had eased traffic at many junctions.
Some said that metro plans are hampering commuter rail service and these networks also do not connect high density areas such as Koramangala, Yelahanka and Whitefield.
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