<p>Bengaluru: South India's first road-metro flyover, ready for inauguration, promises to decongest the notorious Central Silk Board Junction in southern Bengaluru, with full benefits expected next year. </p>.<p>The 3.36-km flyover starts at the Ragigudda metro station and runs until Silk Board Junction below the Yellow Line, which is slated to open this December. </p>.<p>The flyover will have a total of five ramps. Work on two ramps (D and E) is still underway and is to complete in May 2025.</p>.<p>On July 5, <em>DH</em> drove through the unopened double-decker and found about a dozen workers giving it finishing touches. </p>.<p>The 2+2-lane flyover gives a smooth ride and has three U-turns. Three metro stations are situated midway (Jayadeva Hospital, BTM Layout and Silk Board Junction), but commuters cannot access them from the flyover. </p>.<p>Signage and road markings are completed, with small gaps being filled and traffic information boards being installed. </p>.Namma Metro adjusts train timings on Purple Line to address overcrowding issues.<p>BL Yashavanth Chavan, Chief Public Relations Officer, Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL), said the flyover was aimed at making the Silk Board Junction signal-free. "Providing access to metro stations will cause traffic jams," he told <em>DH</em>. </p>.<p>Chavan stressed that constructing ramps D and E was challenging because of the heavy traffic. "Some pillars have been erected, but we have to work in such a way as to minimise inconvenience to the public," he explained. "It's a brownfield project." </p>.<p>Sathees Kumar, Executive Engineer, BMRCL, said the flyover work started in September 2017 and encountered numerous challenges, particularly at the Jayadeva Hospital Junction. </p>.<p>T Mahadeva, Assistant Commissioner of Police (Traffic, Southeast), said the flyover would ease morning rush-hour congestion from Ragigudda and BTM Layout to Hosur Road and HSR Layout, reducing travel time from 30-45 minutes to five minutes. "This flyover will seamlessly connect western Bengaluru with the south," he told <em>DH</em>. </p>.<p>However, Mahadeva cautioned that the incomplete ramps D and E mean there would be little impact on evening rush-hour traffic, which is heavier in the opposite direction.</p>.<p>Vehicles from Hosur Road get a free left turn towards BTM Layout while those from HSR Layout proceed on Hosur Road via a service road, he added. </p>.<p>A survey by the traffic police two years ago found 46,000 vehicles pass through Silk Board Junction between 6 am and 10 pm daily, the officer noted. </p>.First drive on new Silk Board double decker flyover | All you need to know about this elevated road.<p><strong>Night ban? </strong></p>.<p>The traffic police are thinking about closing the flyover from 10 pm to 5 am to prevent accidents. They also want a watchtower at the end of Ramp A to help with road accidents and emergencies. </p>.<p>In a discordant note, regular commuter Krishnan Kuppaswamy believes the new flyover will worsen traffic congestion from HSR Layout to Marathahalli, creating a "nightmare" at Silk Board Junction. He called for improving road conditions, regulating buses and removing road humps. </p>
<p>Bengaluru: South India's first road-metro flyover, ready for inauguration, promises to decongest the notorious Central Silk Board Junction in southern Bengaluru, with full benefits expected next year. </p>.<p>The 3.36-km flyover starts at the Ragigudda metro station and runs until Silk Board Junction below the Yellow Line, which is slated to open this December. </p>.<p>The flyover will have a total of five ramps. Work on two ramps (D and E) is still underway and is to complete in May 2025.</p>.<p>On July 5, <em>DH</em> drove through the unopened double-decker and found about a dozen workers giving it finishing touches. </p>.<p>The 2+2-lane flyover gives a smooth ride and has three U-turns. Three metro stations are situated midway (Jayadeva Hospital, BTM Layout and Silk Board Junction), but commuters cannot access them from the flyover. </p>.<p>Signage and road markings are completed, with small gaps being filled and traffic information boards being installed. </p>.Namma Metro adjusts train timings on Purple Line to address overcrowding issues.<p>BL Yashavanth Chavan, Chief Public Relations Officer, Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL), said the flyover was aimed at making the Silk Board Junction signal-free. "Providing access to metro stations will cause traffic jams," he told <em>DH</em>. </p>.<p>Chavan stressed that constructing ramps D and E was challenging because of the heavy traffic. "Some pillars have been erected, but we have to work in such a way as to minimise inconvenience to the public," he explained. "It's a brownfield project." </p>.<p>Sathees Kumar, Executive Engineer, BMRCL, said the flyover work started in September 2017 and encountered numerous challenges, particularly at the Jayadeva Hospital Junction. </p>.<p>T Mahadeva, Assistant Commissioner of Police (Traffic, Southeast), said the flyover would ease morning rush-hour congestion from Ragigudda and BTM Layout to Hosur Road and HSR Layout, reducing travel time from 30-45 minutes to five minutes. "This flyover will seamlessly connect western Bengaluru with the south," he told <em>DH</em>. </p>.<p>However, Mahadeva cautioned that the incomplete ramps D and E mean there would be little impact on evening rush-hour traffic, which is heavier in the opposite direction.</p>.<p>Vehicles from Hosur Road get a free left turn towards BTM Layout while those from HSR Layout proceed on Hosur Road via a service road, he added. </p>.<p>A survey by the traffic police two years ago found 46,000 vehicles pass through Silk Board Junction between 6 am and 10 pm daily, the officer noted. </p>.First drive on new Silk Board double decker flyover | All you need to know about this elevated road.<p><strong>Night ban? </strong></p>.<p>The traffic police are thinking about closing the flyover from 10 pm to 5 am to prevent accidents. They also want a watchtower at the end of Ramp A to help with road accidents and emergencies. </p>.<p>In a discordant note, regular commuter Krishnan Kuppaswamy believes the new flyover will worsen traffic congestion from HSR Layout to Marathahalli, creating a "nightmare" at Silk Board Junction. He called for improving road conditions, regulating buses and removing road humps. </p>