Infrastructure Upgrade: Mumbai's Elphinstone Bridge Removed as Part of Major Rail Project

Infrastructure Upgrade: Mumbai's Elphinstone Bridge Removed as Part of Major Rail Project.webp

Mumbai, April 5 After serving commuters for 113 years between present-day Parel and Prabhadevi in central Mumbai, the Elphinstone Road Overbridge was demolished on Sunday as workers removed its last remaining girders.

This marks the fifth British-era road overbridge (ROB) to be removed by Central Railway as part of infrastructure upgrades and suburban rail corridor expansion works on the busy CSMT-Kurla stretch in the metropolis, officials said.

The last remaining girders of the Elphinstone bridge were removed during a special night traffic and power shutdown between Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus (CSMT) and Dadar, ensuring minimal disruption to suburban services, which resumed at 7:30 am, according to CR’s Chief Public Relations Officer Swapnil Nila.

He said the bridge, also known as Prabhadevi ROB, was outdated and would be replaced with a double-decker ROB as part of the Worli-Sewree elevated corridor project. Officials said the new east-west connector will be completed in a couple of years.

"With the removal of the Elphinstone ROB, space has been created for two additional suburban lines between Kurla and Parel," he said. The lines will be extended up to CSMT in a later phase under the Mumbai Urban Transport Project.

Officials said the Elphinstone ROB, constructed in 1913, spanned 37 meters over the Central Railway section and had a total width of 13.53 meters. It comprised "steel semi-through girders and eight panels supported by cross girders and an arch trough system," they said.

The dismantling was carried out in a phased manner as the ROB ran over Mumbai's busy rail lines. Nearly 20 corridor blocks were used for preparatory work to remove the deck slab, pipelines, cables, and footpath structures. Subsequently, six major traffic and power blocks were undertaken, during which panels were dismantled in stages and overhead equipment (OHE) was shifted, Nila said.

During the final mega block on the night of April 4-5, the remaining longitudinal beams and the two main girders were removed using heavy-duty cranes with a capacity of up to 800 tonnes, positioned outside the railway boundary, he said.

The operation involved extensive coordination among engineering, traffic, and traction departments, with 95 personnel deployed for OHE modifications, he said.

Officials said the exercise posed several challenges, including restricted space due to nearby high-rise buildings, narrow access points, corroded structural components, and the inherent risks in handling a century-old structure.

Nila said that five east-west connecting British-era bridges, including Masjid ROB, Hancock ROB, Carnac ROB, Sion ROB, and Elphinstone ROB, have so far been removed between CSMT and Kurla as part of ongoing capacity enhancement works.

While a new overpass has already become operational where the original Carnac ROB once stood, work on the Sion ROB is still underway. The Masjid ROB was the first to be dismantled, followed by Hancock and Carnac bridges in subsequent phases.

As documented by Rajendra B Aklekar in his book ‘Halt Station India’, the Elphinstone bridge traces its origins to the early 20th century, when rising rail traffic made level crossings increasingly unviable.

Around 1905, the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR) proposed constructing a road overbridge at Parel to replace a busy crossing. The Bombay Municipality and the neighbouring BB&CI Railway declined to share the cost, forcing GIPR to fund the project entirely, while the civic body constructed the approach roads, as per the book.

The bridge was eventually completed in 1913, featuring imported steel girders and stone plaques bearing the name “Parel Bridge” along with contractor details.

Aklekar notes that the bridge was also referred to in records as “Carroll Bridge”, possibly after E.B. Carroll, a locomotive superintendent associated with the BB&CI Railway who contributed to coach design and lighting systems.

Over the decades, the structure became a key east–west connector serving Mumbai’s erstwhile mill district, linking present-day Parel and Prabhadevi and shaping commuter movement for over a century.

Aklekar said the bridge had two plaques from the construction era, which have been preserved by the executing agencies and will be incorporated into the new structure.

These include stone engravings naming the contractor -- “GIPR, Parel Bridge, 1913, Contractor Bomanji Rustomji” -- and metal seals on the girders reading “P&W Maclellan Limited, Clutha Works, Glasgow, 1911”.

CR officials said the replacement of these ageing structures is aimed at improving rail operations, augmenting capacity, easing road traffic congestion, and enhancing overall commuter safety on Mumbai’s suburban network.

With the bridge now completely dismantled on April 5, 2026, officials said it marks the end of an era.
 
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british-era bridge central railway construction 1913 csmt-kurla elphinstone road overbridge heavy-duty cranes infrastructure upgrade mumbai ohe modifications parel prabhadevi railway engineering road overbridge (rob) steel girders suburban rail corridor expansion worli-sewree elevated corridor
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