Gadkari: Cabinet OKs ₹10,998 cr Varanasi corridor
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Road Transport and Highways Minister Nitin Gadkari announced on Wednesday, 15 July 2026 that the Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has approved a ₹10,998.32 crore elevated corridor project to decongest Varanasi and strengthen its multimodal connectivity.
Context
The approved project is a 43.218-km Link/Connector Corridor that will connect NH-31 with the Varanasi Ring Road along the River Varuna. The corridor will be developed by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) under the Hybrid Annuity Model (HAM), a risk-sharing public-private partnership framework that has become the dominant delivery mechanism for large highway projects in India.
Gadkari described the project as a 'transformative infrastructure boost' for the ancient city, which has long struggled with severe traffic congestion owing to its dense urban fabric, heavy pilgrim footfall, and the convergence of multiple arterial roads near its iconic ghats.
Policy Backdrop
The corridor aligns directly with two flagship central programmes: the Bharatmala Pariyojana, announced in 2015 to develop over 34,000 km of national highways through corridor-based planning, and the PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan, launched in 2021 to integrate road, rail, port, and airport infrastructure under a single planning framework.
The Hybrid Annuity Model, introduced around 2016, was designed to revive highway construction after earlier Build-Operate-Transfer models ran into financial stress. Under HAM, the government pays 40 per cent of the project cost during construction, with the remainder recovered through annuity payments over the concession period, reducing developer risk.
Varanasi has previously been selected under the Smart Cities Mission and the HRIDAY (Heritage City Development and Augmentation Yojana) scheme, reflecting sustained central government focus on upgrading the city's infrastructure without compromising its heritage character.
Stakeholders and Impact
The corridor is designed for speeds of 80–100 km/h and will feature a predominantly elevated 6/4-lane carriageway with flyovers, ramps, loops, and service roads. According to the minister's post, travel time between NH-31 and Kashi Railway Station will be cut from 40 minutes to 20 minutes.
Key destinations linked by the project include Varanasi Airport, Kashi Railway Station, Varanasi Junction, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Junction, Ramnagar Port, and the city's ghats, as well as the adjoining Chandauli region. The integration of these nodes is expected to improve multimodal transport, ease movement for pilgrims and tourists, and support regional economic activity for traders in Chandauli.
Varanasi receives millions of pilgrims and tourists annually, and congestion near the ghats and railway stations has historically been a persistent bottleneck. An elevated corridor bypassing surface-level traffic is expected to provide measurable relief to daily commuters and logistics operators alike.
What's Next
NHAI will now initiate the tendering process for the corridor, with land acquisition progress being a key variable in determining the construction timeline. Observers will watch for integration with the already-approved Varanasi Ring Road and the proposed multimodal hub at the airport, which together could form a comprehensive connectivity spine for the city and its hinterland.
The project reinforces a broader central government pattern of prioritising elevated corridors and ring roads in pilgrimage cities and tier-2 urban centres, using infrastructure investment as both a congestion-management tool and a driver of tourism-led economic growth.