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Chenab


17th January 2026

Good Day Creative People

Today's special topic is as mentioned above.


Let's all look at what it is all about.

The Chenab Rail Bridge, nestled in the rugged Reasi district of Jammu and Kashmir, is a breathtaking testament to modern engineering and decades-long perseverance. Envisioned as part of the ambitious Udhampur–Srinagar–Baramulla Rail Link (USBRL), its roots trace back to the laying of the project's foundation stone in 1983, though full-scale construction only gained momentum in the mid-1990s. Approved in 2003, the bridge's journey was marked by delays due to the region’s formidable terrain and the need for design recalibrations, pushing work to resume earnestly in 2010.


Constructed through the concerted effort of Indian Railways’ Konkan Railway Corporation with Afcons Infrastructure, Ultra Construction, VSL India, and global design expertise, the Chenab Bridge represents a deck-arch structure composed of steel and concrete, stretching about 1,315 meters (4,314 feet) in total length. Its defining feature is a colossal steel arch spanning 467 meters (1,532 feet), the longest of its kind for railway bridges, towering approximately 359 meters (1,178 feet) above the Chenab River bed—an elevation 35 meters taller than Paris’s Eiffel Tower.

Crafted to endure the extremes of Himalayan geography, the bridge employs about 28,660 to 29,000 metric tonnes of steel and roughly 66,000 cubic meters of concrete, enabling robust resistance to wind speeds up to 266 km/h, earthquakes up to magnitude 8, and even potential blasts—bolstered through DRDO-backed structural design and telltale blast-resistant materials like thick steel plates.

Engineering on such a scale demanded groundbreaking methods: a twin-rib arch of prefabricated steel boxes filled with concrete to enhance compressive strength and redundancy, erected using one of the tallest cable-crane systems (with 127 m pylons) ever deployed—an innovation essential for working in steep valleys where conventional cranes were impractical. The terrain’s geology was equally challenging; construction took place atop unstable shale and dolomite formations, but foundation rocks proved strong and stable, enabling secure piers and abutments after meticulous geo-technical assessments.

The bridge, designed for two railway tracks, spans 17 segments with a width of approximately 13.5 meters (44 ft), and can support train speeds around 100 km/h, backed by a design lifespan of about 120 years. Corrosion-resistant coatings and an advanced online structural health monitoring system were incorporated for durability and safety in adverse weather and seismic conditions.

Milestones in construction spanned years: foundational supports were completed by November 2017, the steel arch was closed by March–April 2021, and the bridge was fully constructed by August 2022. Following safety trials—including first test runs in June 2024—the bridge officially opened for rail traffic on 6 June 2025, in a grand inauguration led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who flagged off Vande Bharat Express services across the structure, completing the USBRL corridor—a project decades in the making.

Beyond its structural marvel, the Chenab Bridge stands as a strategic and cultural milestone—strengthening year-round rail connectivity to the Kashmir Valley, fostering socio-economic integration, tourism, and logistical efficiency in a region that was historically fragmented due to harsh winters and fragile road networks. Its successful completion not only embodies engineering audacity but also symbolizes a century-old vision realized—a powerful statement of national aspiration, human ingenuity, and resilient progress.


To know more about it do join us at Creative Edge.


May your day be blessed.

 

 
 
 

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