Skip to main content

Road ahead fraught with danger

With more than 300 people losing their lives in road accidents every year, the Millennium City in Haryana, India, desperately needs to improve its road infrastructure. Although successive governments in Haryana have gifted the city numerous expressways, making the roads safe and traffic flow smooth has not figured prominently in the political schemes of development. Traffic in the city and on the expressways, most significantly the Gurgaon-Delhi Expressway, has been mired by a range of problems, from a sca
July 29, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
With more than 300 people losing their lives in road accidents every year, the Millennium City in Haryana, India, desperately needs to improve its road infrastructure.
 
Although successive governments in Haryana have gifted the city numerous expressways, making the roads safe and traffic flow smooth has not figured prominently in the political schemes of development.
 
Traffic in the city and on the expressways, most significantly the Gurgaon-Delhi Expressway, has been mired by a range of problems, from a scarcity of traffic police to faulty road engineering. Police commissioner Alok Mittal has said, “I accept that traffic management is the biggest challenge to the police force in the city. There is just a handful of 300 traffic police, which is why most of the new recruits, who will be inducted most probably by the end of July, will be channelled into traffic duty.”
 
Other problems include the lack of or broken service roads; traffic lights that do not function properly and are without a power back-up; poorly engineered roundabouts and roads; absence of pedestrian walkways and footbridges or underpasses; and speeding and overloading.
 
“Transport is the basis of sustainable development; you cannot build a city first and then ask transport to follow. All development should be transport-led,” says Rohit Baluja, president, 5035 Institute of Road Traffic Education, New Delhi.

Related Content

  • New York’s Midtown in Motion traffic management system wins ITS America award
    June 6, 2012
    ITS America has recognised the New York City Department of Transportation (NYC DoT) for Midtown in Motion, the sophisticated traffic management system launched last July that uses ITS to ease traffic congestion, improve traffic flow, and reduce greenhouse emissions and air pollution on the city’s most congested streets. Coinciding with the award, NYC DoT announced that it is expanding the system, which currently covers 110-square blocks, to cover 270-square blocks in the city’s most heavily congested neighb
  • InnoSenT sizes up ITR-3800
    December 5, 2022
    Small radar system is designed for intersection management and traffic monitoring
  • Why keeping count is so important for traffic management
    November 21, 2023
    Traffic engineers need to have multiple solutions in their toolbox to complete the most accurate and safe data collection programmes possible, explains Wes Guckert of The Traffic Group
  • 'No lack of political drive' on ITS
    June 11, 2012
    This issue of ITS International contains a feature article based on interviews with leading figures of the ITS associations of the United States, Europe, Japan and Malaysia. A key point made is the importance of political leadership or policy direction in driving take up and implementation of ITS technology. This industry actually need not complain of a lack of drive on the part of politicians, or so it seems from other projects reported in this issue. True, the US would welcome a new transport bill and the