Kolkata Metro

Kolkata Metro
Overview
Locale Kolkata, West Bengal,  India
Transit type Rapid Transit
Number of lines 1
Number of stations 24 Stations
Daily ridership Over 650,000[1]
Chief executive

P. C. Sharma (General Manager) (Metro Railway, Kolkata)

Parashuram Singh (MD)(Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation, Kolkata)
Headquarters

Metro Railway, Kolkata Head Office - Metro Rail Bhavan, 33/1 J.L. Nehru Road, Kolkata - 700071 [2]

Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation Head Office - HRBC Complex, KMRCL Bhawan, 2nd & 3rd Floor, Munsi Premchand Sarani, Kolkata - 700021[3]
Website
Operation
Began operation 24 October 1984 (24 October 1984)
Operator(s)

Metro Railway, Kolkata, 17th Railway Zone of Indian Railways, Operated by Ministry of Railways

Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation Ltd. Undertaken by Govt. of India
Number of vehicles 27
Train length 8 Coaches
Headway 5, 6, 8, 10, 15 Minutes
Technical
System length 27.22 km
Track gauge 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)
(Broad gauge) For Line 1, Line 3, Line 4, Line 5 and Line 6
1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
(Standard gauge) For Line 2
Electrification 750 V DC Third Rail
Average speed 55-60 KMPH

The Kolkata Metro is a rapid transit system serving the Kolkata metropolitan area in the Indian state of West Bengal. The network currently consists of one operational line of 27.22 km from Noapara to Kavi Subhash with five other lines in various phases of construction. The Kolkata Metro was the first metro railway in India, opening for commercial services from 1984. On 29 December 2010, Metro Railway, Kolkata became the 17th zone of the Indian Railways, operated by the Ministry of Railways. There are 300 metro services daily carrying over 650,000 passengers making it the second busiest metro system in India.[4]

History

The then Chief Minister of West Bengal, Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy, first conceived the idea of building an Underground Railway for Kolkata in early 1950s. A survey was done by a team of French experts, but nothing concrete came of this. Efforts to solve the problem by augmenting the existing fleet of public transport vehicles hardly helped, since roads accounted for only 4.2% of the surface area in Kolkata, compared with 25% in Delhi and even 30% in other cities. With the goal of finding alternative solutions to alleviate the suffering of commuters, the Metropolitan Transport Project (Railways) (MTP) was set up in 1969.[5] The MTP (Rlys), with help of Soviet specialists (Lenmetroproekt) and East German engineers, prepared a master plan to provide five rapid-transit (metro) lines for the city of Kolkata, totalling a route length of 97.5 km in 1971.[6] However, only three were selected for construction. These were:

Of these, the highest priority was given to the busy north-south axis between Dum Dum and Tollygunge over a length of 16.45 km, and the work on this project was sanctioned on 1 June 1972. The foundation stone of the project was laid by Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister of India, on 29 December 1972 and the construction work started in 1973-74. In those early days of Kolkata Metro, the planning, thought processing, and political facilitation of the whole project was borne almost single-handedly by the then Union Railway Minister from West Bengal - A. B. A. Ghani Khan Choudhury - often against (and to the chagrin of) the prevailing socio-political stance of his contemporaries in the West Bengal government. From the start of construction, the project had to contend with several problems including insufficient funds (until 1977-78), a shifting of underground utilities, court injunctions, and an irregular supply of vital materials.

Despite the difficulties faced, services began on 24 October 1984, with the commissioning of a partial commercial service covering a distance of 3.40 km[6] with five stations served in between Esplanade and Bhowanipur (currently Netaji Bhavan). The first metro was driven by Tapan Kumar Nath and Sanjoy Sil. The service was quickly followed by commuter services on another 2.15 km stretch in the north between Dum Dum and Belgachhia on 12 November 1984. The commuter service was extended up to Tollygunge on 29 April 1986 covering a further distance of 4.24 km making the service available over a distance of 9.79 km and covering 11 stations. However, the services on the north section were suspended with effect from 26 October 1992, as this isolated small section was little used.

After a gap of more than eight years, the 1.62 km Belgachhia-Shyambazaar section, along with the Dum Dum-Belgachhia stretch, was opened on 13 August 1994. Another 0.71 km stretch from Esplanade to Chandni Chowk was commissioned shortly afterwards, on 2 October 1994. The Shyambazaar-Shobhabazar-Girish Park (1.93 km) and Chandni Chowk-Central (0.60 km) sections were opened on 19 February 1995. Services on the entire stretch of the Metro were introduced from 27 September 1995 by bridging the vital gap of 1.80 km in the middle. [7]

In the final stage, the extension of Line 1 to an elevated corridor from Tollygunge to New Garia was constructed and opened in two phases, Mahanayak Uttam Kumar to Kavi Nazrul in 2009 and Kavi Nazrul to Kavi Subhash in 2010. The latest extension constructed was the 2.59 km elevated corridor from Dum Dum to Noapara on 10 July 2013.

The state government has also prepared a detailed project report on a proposed extension of East West Metro (Kolkata Metro Line 2) from Howrah Maidan to Santragachhi. Rites, the implementing agency for the 10 km East-West Metro extension project from Howrah Maidan to Santragachhi bus terminus, is set to start work on the corridor early in 2017.[8]

Planning

In 2010, the Railway Ministry announced plans for the construction of five new metro lines and an extension of the existing North-South corridor. These new projects are:

Major modifications

  • Construction of station at Noapara: A new 4-platform station has been constructed at Noapara. Commuters of Line 1 will be able to interchange trains going towards the Airport via Line 4 (Noapara-Barasat). For the time being only two platforms are in use, but once Line 4 gets started, all four platforms will become operational.
  • Upgrade of Esplanade metro station: A subway is going to be constructed in the existing Esplanade station to provide an interchange between Line 1 and Line 2.
  • "India's Highest metro station": Line 2 of Kolkata metro will have an extension towards Airport from its existing Central Park station. In that extension, A new Station at the Haldiram Crossing on VIP road will be constructed at a height of 22 metres, going to be the highest in the country.

Active routes

Line First Run Last Extension Station Length (KM) Terminals Rolling Stock Track Gauge (mm) Power Avg. Frequency (min)
Line 1 24-10-1984 14-03-2013 24 27.22 Noapara Kavi Subhash 27 trains 1676 750 V DC 5

Proposed networks

Kolkata Metro Railway Map (Metro Railway, Kolkata & East West Metro)
Line First operational /
expected first run
Last extension Stations Length
(km)
Terminals Rolling Stock Track gauge Power
Line 1October 1984[9]Noapara2427.11Kavi SubhashNoapara ICF1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)750 V DC using third rail
Line 2October 2018 (Sector V to Salt Lake Stadium), Phoolbagan March 2019, Complete route June 2021[9]1216.00Howrah MaidanSalt Lake Sector V BEML1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)750 V DC using third rail
Line 3December 2019 (Joka - Majerhat)1216.72JokaEsplanade 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)750 V DC using third rail
Line 4December 2020 (Noapara-Airport)918.5NoaparaBarasat 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)
Line 51112.42BaranagarBarrakpore 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)
Line 6June 2019 (Kavi Subhash - Ruby), June 2019 (Ruby - Sector V)2329.10Kavi SubhashAirport 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)
Total94140.65

Line 1 (Noapara-Kavi Subhash Metro)

Line 1 has a total length of 27 kilometres (17 mi) serving 24 stations of which 15 are underground. It has a combination of elevated, ground-level and underground lines and uses five and a half feet (1.7 metres) of Indian gauge, a broad gauge rolling stock. It was the first underground railway to be built in India, with the first trains running in October 1984, and the full stretch that had been initially planned was completed and operational by February 1995. On 28 December 2010, it became the 17th zone of the Indian Railways.[10] The New Delhi Metro, which opened in 2002, is the second such urban metro rail network in India. It had benefitted from the expertise gained during the Kolkata metro construction. In being the country's first metro and constructed as a completely indigenous process, the Kolkata Metro was more of a trial-and-error affair, in contrast to the Delhi Metro, which has also seen the involvement of numerous international consultants. As a result, it took nearly 23 years to completely construct a 17 km underground railway.[11]

Line 2 (East-West Metro)

East West Metro Corridor Route Map

East-West Metro, a 4874.6 crore (US$750 million) project to connect Kolkata with Howrah by an underwater metro line, below the Hooghly river, was given the go-ahead by the central government.[12] The length was supposed to be 14.67 km (8.9 km underground and 5.77 km elevated). This line will be constructed and maintained by a separate body named Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation (KMRC). However, in January 2011 KMRC and the entire East West (EW) metro corridor, was taken over by the Ministry of Railways from the Ministry of Urban development and the state government of West Bengal. Now the East-West Metro's majority stake is with the Indian Railways and the remainder is as a loan from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation.

The West Bengal government had earlier appointed Delhi Metro Rail Corporation Limited to conduct a feasibility study of the project, after which the government had to then put the project on hold due to funding issues. The underwater metro plan was thought of when the first metro service was inaugurated in Kolkata in 1984 by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The route is to cover 12 stations (6 elevated, 6 underground) and go under the river through a tunnel. The foundation stone was laid on 22 February 2009.

The construction of line 2 started in March 2009. However the project was stalled several times due to land acquisition and slum relocation issues. A major realignment was done in June, 2016 which increased the length to 16.55 km (10.81 km underground, 5.77 km elevated). The proposed intersection with Line 1 and Line 3 will be at Esplanade. The delays along with foreign currency losses has led to a 80% cost escalation of the project to nearly 9000 crore (1.5 billion USD).[13]

Under Construction Karunamoyee Metro Station on the East-West metro Route

The East-West Metro will run from Salt Lake, Sector 5 (in the east) to Howrah Maidan (in the west). Phase I of the project from Sector V to Sealdah and a distance of 9 km is expected to be operational by June, 2018. Phase II of the project between Sealdah and Howrah Maidan, a distance of 7 km is expected to be operational by August, 2019.[13]

The rolling stock will be supplied by BEML at a cost of 900 crore, which will consist of 14 train sets, of 6 coaches each, with Propulsion system by Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Japan.[14] Trains will be air conditioned, and all stations will be equipped with platform screen doors. It will run on standard (4 ft 8.5 in or 1,435 mm) gauge, unlike line 1, which runs on broad (5 ft 6 in or 1,676 mm) gauge.

Between Lal Dighi and Howrah Station, the metro will run under the Hooghly River – the first underwater metro in India. The line will be elevated between Salt Lake Sector 5 and Salt Lake Stadium, and the remaining stretch will be underground. Transfer stations will be located at Sealdah and Howrah. A new elevated extension from Central Park to Haldiram has been sanctioned, a distance of 5.5 km at a budget of 674 crore.[15] From Haldiram the passengers can take the Line 6 metro to Airport.

Line 3 (Joka-Esplanade Metro)

A 16.72 km long metro line from Joka (in extreme South Kolkata) and Esplanade (in central Kolkata) is under construction. It is being built by RVNL and the tender has gone to Simplex Infrastructures.

Proposed stations on this route:[16]

  1. Joka 00 km
  2. Thakurpukur 3.455 km
  3. Sakherbazar 4.67 km
  4. Behala Chowrasta 6.13 km
  5. Behala Bazar 7.460 km
  6. Taratala 8.50 km
  7. Majerhat 9.74 km
  8. Mominpur 10.755 km
  9. Kidderpore 11.87 km
  10. Victoria 14.025 km
  11. Park Street (Intersection with Line 1) 15.29 km
  12. Dharamtala(Esplanade) 16.215 km (Intersection With Line 1 and Line 2 ).

The proposed Esplanade station will not to be the same as that of Line 1 (North-South Metro) but a completely different station which will also serve Line 2 . Park Street will also serve as an interchange between Line 3 and Line 1.

Line 4 (Noapara-Barasat Metro)

The project to build an 18.5 km line from Noapara to Barasat via Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport[17] is sanctioned and construction work has commenced.

The proposed stations on this route are[18]

  1. Noapara (Intersection with Line 1) 0.00 km
  2. Dum Dum Cantonment 2.80 km
  3. Jessore Road 5.08 km
  4. Biman Bandar (Intersection with Line 6) 6.245 km
  5. Birati 7.90 km
  6. Michael nagar 
  7. New Barrackpore 10.405 km
  8. Madhyamgram 12.310 km
  9. Hridaypur 14.80 km
  10. Barasat 17.13 km

The route was further altered in 2016, and now the New Garia line will continue till Barasat and the Dum Dum Noapara line will extend and terminate at Biman Bandar. According to the altered plan, the Dum Dum-airport-Barasat link on an elevated corridor will end at Biman Bandar station of the suburban network.[19]

Line 5 (Baranagar-Barrackpore Metro)

The Baranagar-Barrackpore Metro (Line 5) (12.40 km) was meant to enable a quicker commute from the northern suburbs to South Kolkata. As of February 2015, however, this project was unlikely to be executed as metro construction would affect the water pipelines along Barrackpore Trunk Road.[20]

Eleven metro stations were planned on this route. The stations are -

  1. Baranagar 0.00 km
  2. Kamarhati/Belgharia 1.20 km
  3. Agarpara 2.80 km
  4. Sodepur 4.20 km
  5. Panihati 5.40 km
  6. Subhash Nagar 6.50 km
  7. Khardah 7.90 km
  8. Tata Gate 8.80 km
  9. Titagarh 10.10 km
  10. Talpukur 11.40 km
  11. Barrackpore 12.40 km

There is a proposal to continue this line through the Kalyani Expressway.

Line 6 (Kavi Subhash–Jai Hind Metro)

A connection between New Garia and the Airport (29.1 km) via E M Bypass, Saltlake and Rajarhat has started; it will help to reduce travel time between the southern fringes of Kolkata to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport. The work on this New Garia-Airport line was inaugurated by Mamata Banerjee on 7 February 2011 with a project deadline of six years.[21] The link between Kavi Subhas (New Garia) and the airport, to be set up at a cost of Rs4 billion, will have 24 stations with the terminal Airport station being an underground one.

The stations, as declared of now, will be named after eminent personalities.[21]

  1. Kavi Subhash Metro Station (Intersection with Line 1) 0.00 km
  2. Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute 1.6 km
  3. Mukundapur 3.0 km
  4. Kalikapur 4.1 km
  5. Ruby Hospital 5.1 km
  6. VIP Bazar 6.40 km
  7. Bantala 7.30 km
  8. Science City 8.6 km
  9. Beliaghata 9.5 km
  10. Chingrighata 11.2 km
  11. Nicco Park 12.6 km
  12. Salt Lake Sector V (Intersection with Line 2) 13.9 km
  13. Technopolis 15.1 km
  14. Bidhan Nagar 16.2 km
  15. Sub CBD-1 17.5 km
  16. CBD-1 18.6 km
  17. CBD-2 20.0 km
  18. New Town 20.9 km
  19. Convention Center 22.1 km
  20. Sub CBD-2 23.30 km
  21. City Centre 24.2 km
  22. Rabindra Tirtha 25.1 km
  23. VIP Road 26.7 km(Intersection with Line 2)
  24. Airport (Intersection with Line 4) 29.1 km

This line will continue till Barasat and Dum Dum - Noapara Line will extend and terminate at Biman Bandar.[19]

Infrastructure

Rolling stock

BHEL rake(1000 series)
3000 (new) AC series coaches of Kolkata Metro

The rolling stock of Kolkata Metro Line 1 uses Indian gauge a broad gauge track which is manufactured by Integral coach factory, Chennai (ICF), and the electrical components are manufactured by NGEF, Bangalore. Initially, the rolling stock fleet was composed of 4-car rakes. Over the years there has been considerable expansion to the network, both underground and on elevated sections. With the increase in traffic, 8-car rake formation has become a standard for the Kolkata Metro. Presently there are 18 Non AC rakes and 13 AC rakes. Out of the 18 Non AC rakes, 11 will be phased out gradually since they have outlived their normal life of 25 years. The remaining 7 rakes are still in good condition so they will be refurbished and put into service in a phased manner. Until now, three types of trains have been used by Kolkata metro; these are -

  • BHEL rake (1000 series): 9 rakes were manufactured by ICF, Chennai and were passed into service in the first phase when the metro initially ran from Esplanade to Bhowanipur.[22] These trains were dark green in colour and had a yellow stripe at the bottom. Later the colour was changed to white with a dark blue stripe. Presently they are yellow with a wide brown band at the bottom. The rakes are usually numbered from B1 to B9.
Operating from 1984 – present
Length per coach 19.5 m
Length per train 156 m
Width per coach 2.74 m
Maximum speed 55 km/h
Average operating speed 30–31 km/h
Voltage 750 V DC
Electrification 3rd rail
Coaches per train 8
Capacity per coach 300 approx.[23]
Capacity per train 2400 approx.
Total horse power of rake 3036 HP
Environment control Non AC with forced ventilation with washed and cooled air
  • NGEF rake (2000 series): 9 more rakes manufactured by ICF were put into operation in the next phase of service when the Metro rail expanded. These rakes were tougher and had higher acceleration than the previous ones. The colors of these trains were dark yellow with a maroon stripe at the bottom, later they were repainted in white with a maroon stripe and now they are white with a blue band at the bottom. The rakes are marked with 8N symbols
Operating from 1990 – present
Length per coach 19.5 m
Length per train 156 m
Width per coach 2.74 m
Maximum speed 55 km/h
Average operating speed 30–31 km/h
Voltage 750 V DC
Electrification 3rd rail
Coaches per train 8
Capacity per coach 300 approx.[23]
Capacity per train 2400 approx.
Total horse power of rake 5221 HP
Environment control Non AC with forced ventilation with washed and cooled air
  • BHEL/Knorr-Bremse AC (3000 series): These are the latest trains that were passed into service in 2010, after the elevated corridor from Mahanayak Uttam Kumar to Kavi Nazrul was completed. Later, as the last extension from Kavi Nazrul to Kavi Subhash was finished, more 3000 series rakes were introduced. These trains are manufactured by ICF in collaboration with BHEL and Knorr-Bremse, Germany. They have microprocessor controlled temperature and humidity, LCD displays inside the motorman's cabins and multilingual electronic LED sign boards both inside and outside the train. Presently there are 13 (3000 series) rakes, which are operating on Line 1.
Operating from 2010 – present
Length per coach 20.3 m
Length per train 162.4 m
Width per coach 2.74 m
Maximum speed 80 km/h
Average operating speed 35 km/h
Voltage 750 V DC
Electrification 3rd rail
Coaches per train 8
Capacity per coach 392[23]
Capacity per train 3136 approx.
Total horse power of rake 5449 HP
Environment control Air conditioned
  • BEML : The Bidding by the Spanish company CAF for Line 2 was cancelled due to fund related problems. Re-bidding was done and BEML was given the contract for 14 rakes of 6 coaches each at a cost of 900 crore. The rakes will be microprocessor controlled with 3 phase AC motors. The rakes will be supplied to Kolkata by mid-2017.[14]
  • CNR Dalian Locomotive company : 14 new rakes composed of 8 coaches each will be supplied to Kolkata metro by CNR Dalian Locomotive company, which will be running on Line 1. These rakes will be of ultra-modern technology. They will have doors that will be 20 cm wider than any other metro rails in India. They will have wide vestibules, 2.5 feet wider than the existing trains. The design consists of aerodynamic front with large doors and LED lights, and a violet colored stripe on silver color body. The 1st of the 14 rakes from Chinese firm Dalian is slated to arrive by December 2017. The rest of the 13 rakes will take around six months more. These rakes are capable of a top speed of 80 kmph and an average speed of 65 kmph (10 kmph higher than the existing ones).
  • ICF/MEDHA : 2 prototype rakes manufactured by ICF chennai and MEDHA will soon be supplied to Kolkata Metro fleet, and is expected to reach by first week of September 2017. These state-of-the-Art trains will be completely different from existing AC trains made By ICF BHEL/KNORR. These will have 3 phase alternating current motors, regenerative braking, stainless steel body, CCTV cameras and better passenger information system. Recently, 10 more rakes were ordered.[24]

Stations and electrification

Shobhabazar Sutanuti Metro Station, Calcutta

Kolkata metro has 24 stations, 15 of which are underground, 7 are elevated and 2 stations are at grade. All the underground stations have island platforms except Park Street which has side platforms. While all the elevated stations have side platforms, Noapara has island platforms and since it will be the hub station for Line 1 and Line 4 it has 4 platforms having a length of 182m. The standard length of platforms in Kolkata Metro is 170m. The metro stations of Gitanjali & Netaji have the shortest platforms of 163m.[25] The average length between any two stations is 1.14 km. The shortest distance is 0.597 km between Central and Chandni Chowk, whereas the longest distance is 2.15 km between Dum Dum and Belgachia. Since the electrification of Kolkata metro is of the 3rd Rail, 750 V DC, electricity substations were built in Jatin Das Park, Central, Shyambazar.[26] The type of tracks are ballast-less with M1A track fittings.

Signalling and frequency

Kolkata metro trains operate on typical Indian Railways automatic signalling technology. A Route Relay Interlocking System has been provided at Mahanayak Uttam Kumar and Noapara carshed and are in operation to facilitate the prompt withdrawal and injection of rakes as well as performing shunting operations inside the car shed, required for maintenance purposes. Train Protection & Warning System(TPWS) is provided on the entire stretch of the Metro Railway. This system is designed to prevent collision caused by human (operator) error.[27] Train Describer System and Auto Train Charting have also been provided to help the operartion control centre to monitor and plan train movement on a real time basis.[28]

The Metro Railway operates between 06:45 and 21:55 hours, running every 7 minutes and every 5 minutes during peak hours on weekdays. Metro runs on Sundays between the hours of 09:50 to 21:55 hours. A number of 270 trains run everyday during week days, 205 on Saturdays and 92 on Sundays.

Services

The Kolkata Metro provides seats in every compartment which are reserved for women and senior citizens. Though most Metro stations are equipped with air conditioners and water coolers there are some stations like Central is not fully air conditioned and also a few metro rakes are air conditioned.

Tokens

After using the magnetic ticketing system for 27 years from 1984 to 2011, Kolkata Metro introduced Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) tokens by Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS) from 2011. The old magnetic strip reader gates were replaced by new RFID readers.

Smart card

After introducing RFID tokens, Kolkata metro introduced a Smart Card service introduced by Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS). These smart cards are multi-programmable and commuters can opt for the various multi-ride schemes. The general smart card is most popular among daily commuters to avoid the queue.

Security

All stations are equipped with closed-circuit cameras and metal detectors, making the metro the safest form of transport in Kolkata.[29] Taking photographs and smoking are strictly prohibited in the metro premises.

Departments of Metro Railway, Kolkata

Public Relations, Accounts, Electrical, Vigilance, Traffic, Engineering, Signal & Telecommunications, Personnel, Medical, Stores etc.[30]

Kolkata Metro snapshot

Kolkata Metro
StationsLength (km)Ridership (in millions)
2428237
Ranking
India552
Asia546027
World11211353

See also

References

  1. "Kolkata Metro's expansion plan to change life and times of commuters". The Times of India. 12 August 2012.
  2. http://mtp.indianrailways.gov.in
  3. "300 and more, metro services". 11 September 2016.
  4. "Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation Ltd". Kmrc.in. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  5. 1 2 "Kolkata Metro Rail Corporation Ltd". Kmrc.in. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  6. "History". Retrieved 2013-07-18.
  7. "2017 start for Howrah EW Metro". Times of India.
  8. 1 2 "Metro prepares completion calendar for city projects". Times of India. Retrieved 6 July 2017.
  9. "Kolkata Metro is now the 17th zone of Indian Railways". The Times of India. 29 December 2010. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  10. "Photograph of carriage interior" (JPG). 3.bp.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  11. Archived 10 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. 1 2 "East West Metro project cost to shoot up to nearly Rs 9,000 cr - Times of India". Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  13. 1 2 "Central PSU wins Rs 900-crore Metro rake order - Times of India". Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  14. "Mixed bag for Bengal in Railway Budget 2016; Kolkata gets new Metro route". 2016-02-25. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  15. "Joka-Eplanade Metro on the anvil". The Times Of India. 10 July 2010.
  16. Mandal, Sanjay (29 July 2009). "Circle of Metro commute". The Telegraph. Calcutta, India.
  17. "Dum Dum-Barrackpore Metro project awaits state nod". Thestatesman.net. Archived from the original on 9 June 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  18. "Going going... RIP Barrackpore Metro". The Telegraph. 26 February 2015.
  19. "Salient Data on rolling stock". Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  20. 1 2 3 "First look: your swank AC Metro". Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  21. "Kolkata Metro|Metro to get new-generation rakes by July 2016 | | Metro rail News". www.metrorailnews.in. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  22. "Platforms at two stations shorter than stipulated". 26 May 2010. Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  23. "Existing Features". Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  24. "Automatic warning to make Metro safer". 3 March 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  25. "Existing Signalling System". Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  26. "Kolkata metro to install x-ray baggage scanners". Daily News and Analysis. 5 October 2012. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  27. "Metro Railway Kolkata - 2013 MBA". Mba.ind.in. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
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