The proposed four-lane highway having 45-m width will bypass Kundannoor
Junction, the narrow, ill-maintained 2-km-long Kundannoor-Thevara Bridge,
Alexander Parambithara Bridge and the bottlenecked Mattancherry BOT Bridge
Junction. The land acquisition process for the port connectivity highway
corridor, that was then estimated to be 6-km-long, had hit a hurdle earlier
this year, since the NHAI and the Cochin Port Authority (CPA) were not on the
same page regarding its alignment.
The project is now set to take
off since the extent and the number of curves on the corridor have been
reduced. The revised alignment that has been mulled is
expected to be finalised in two months along with the detailed project report
(DPR). It would in turn lessen the distance of the highway and also the extent
of land acquisition, it is learnt.
Apart from decongesting the Nettoor-Kundannoor Junction-CIFT Junction
corridor, the proposed highway would considerably augment connectivity to the
port from Nettoor on the NH 66 Bypass, from where the 44-km-long, six-lane
Kochi Bypass is set to take off from and end at Karayamparambu that is located
beyond Angamaly on NH 544. The two highway corridors in the offing are expected
to cater to container lorries from Vizhinjam and other ports.
The NHAI had envisaged a
trumpet flyover at Nettoor to cater to traffic that would converge there from
NH 66 Bypass and the two proposed highways. The CIFT
Junction too would be developed, as part of the NH 966-B port-connectivity
highway, said informed sources.
The Union Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) had in
November 2023 approved the initial alignment for the port connectivity NH
corridor, while the land acquisition process was slated to begin from December.
The
CPA had constraints about the alignment since it reportedly passed through land
bordering the backwaters where a hospitality project was in the offing.