National Highway 58 (India, old numbering) explained

This article is about the old number of Delhi-Meerut-Roorkee-Haridwar-Badrinath National Highway.

Country:IND
Type:NH
Route:58
Map:National Highway 58 (India).png
Map Notes:Road map of India with NH 58 highlighted in thick blue colour
Length Km:538
Direction A:South
Terminus A:Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh
Destinations:Ghaziabad - Meerut - Muzaffarnagar - Roorkee -Haridwar - Rishikesh - Joshimath - Badrinath - Mana Pass
Direction B:North
Terminus B:Mana Pass north of Badrinath, Uttarakhand
States:Uttar Pradesh

165km (103miles)
Uttarakhand: 373km (232miles)

Previous Type:NH
Previous Route:57A
Next Type:NH
Next Route:59

National Highway 58 (NH 58) was a national highway in India before it was renumbered. It linked Ghaziabad in Uttar Pradesh near New Delhi with Badrinath and Mana Pass in Uttarakhand near Indo-Tibet border. The highway started from Mana village north of Badrinath temple and passed through Badrinath, Joshimath, Chamoli, Vishnuprayag, Nandaprayag, Karnaprayag, Rudraprayag, Srinagar, Devprayag, Rishikesh, Haridwar, Roorkee, Muzaffarnagar, Meerut and Modinagar and ended at Ghaziabad, a few km short of Delhi.

Of its total length of 538 km, NH 58 traversed 165 km in Uttar Pradesh and 373 km in Uttarakhand.[1]

The highway was constructed and maintained by National Highways Authority of India from Delhi to Rishikesh and Border Roads Organisation (BRO) of Indian Army from Rishikesh, where the plains end and the mountains start, to its northernmost end. The highway bypasses Meerut city that was a big bottleneck. Bypasses have been constructed at Muzaffarnagar and Roorkee.[2]

Various segments of NH 58 have got new numbers now and NH 58 does not exist as such. However, many persons continue to use the term NH 58 for the Delhi-Meerut-Haridwar highway.

NH 58 broken into various NH numbers

With the National Highways Authority of India renumbering all national highways in India, various segments of NH 58 got new NH numbers. These are:

The highway bypasses the towns and cities en route from Haridwar to Meerut.

Importance of NH 58 (old number)

Religious

It is an important route for Hindu pilgrims as it connects the national capital New Delhi with religious pilgrim centres, Haridwar and Rishikesh in the plains of Uttarakhand, and then with the hill cities and temples of Uttarakhand. The most important pilgrimage circuit in Uttarakhand is called Chhota Char Dham (Four Pilgrimage Centres) comprising Yamunotri (where Yamuna river originates), Gangotri (where Ganga river originates), Kedarnath temple and Badrinath temple. The pilgrims visit Haridwar and Rishikesh in the plains the entire year but more so during the winter. The pilgrim season in the hills starts with melting of the snow at the end of April or in the beginning of May and continues until the onset of monsoon rains in late June. Buses and vehicles packed with pilgrims and tourists throng the highway during the summer months.

The highway is packed with pilgrims and tourists during pilgrimage season or during important festivals.[3] When pilgrims bring holy water from Ganga river and carry it to their villages and homes walking on foot all the way during one fortnight, one lane of the highway is reserved for these pilgrims who walk on foot and vehicles have to use only one lane for about two weeks in a year.

Tens of millions of pilgrims attending the Kumbh Mela in January to March 2021 at Haridwar will use this highway extensively. More than 50 million devotees attended the last Kumbh Mela.[4]

Strategic and military

The highway connects with the border with Tibet. It is built and maintained by Border Roads Organisation (BRO) of Indian Army from Rishikesh, where the plains end and the mountains start, to its northernmost end. Earlier it was built only up to Chamoli and has over the years gradually been extended to Joshimath, Badrinath and finally to Mana Pass near the border with Tibet. The army along with civilians living in Garhwal are its major user. CharDham yatra in summer is all thru this route.

Development

As of December 2013, the Meerut to Muzaffarnagar stretch is 4-laned on toll basis including bypasses at Khatauli and Muzaffarnagar. The Muzaffarnagar to Haridwar stretch has been awarded for similar development with scheduled completion by February 2013, but has been delayed due to problems such as land acquisition, tree felling and inadequate mobilization by the Concessionaire.[5] Also, a flyover at Mohan Nagar, a 4710 m long viaduct at Modinagar and a 1710 m long viaduct at Murad Nagar are proposed.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: National Highways and their lengths . 2009-02-12 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20100210021118/http://www.nhai.org/nh.asp . 10 February 2010 . dead .
  2. Web site: NHAI cancels contract for Dehradun highway, serves notice for Haridwar stretch | India News - Times of India. The Times of India.
  3. News: Major traffic jams on Somwati Amavasya: 20 lakh devotees take dip in Haridwar and Rishikesh. . 23 June 2009 .
  4. Web site: Eyes in the sky. Indian authorities had to manage 250 million festivalgoers. So they built a high-tech surveillance ministate. . Rest of World . 23 June 2020 . Monica . Jha . 23 June 2020 .
  5. Web site: Press Release - Development of Meerut-Muzaffarnagar-Haridwar Stretch. Press Information Bureau, Government of India. 17 December 2013. 6 January 2014.
  6. Web site: Press Release - Construction of Flyovers on National Highway-58. Press Information Bureau, Government of India. 9 December 2013. 6 January 2014.
  7. Web site: अतिक्रमण हटाकर शुरू कराया हाईवे बाईपास निर्माण कार्य.
  8. Web site: NH-58 project to be completed a month before deadline, says NHAI official | Dehradun News - Times of India. The Times of India.
  9. Web site: उत्तराखंड से दिल्ली की दूरी हो गई कुछ कम..आखिरकार खुल ही गया 12 Km लंबा बाईपास.