Chennai Pushes Sustainable Mobility With TBM Feat
Chennai’s metro network recorded a rare engineering accomplishment this week, as Phase 2 works at Kolathur saw the completion of a critical underground breakthrough while another tunnel boring machine (TBM) was launched simultaneously from the same station — a dual milestone believed to be the first of its kind in the country. The feat signals not just construction efficiency but also a step towards expanding low-carbon urban mobility for one of India’s fastest-growing cities.
According to senior project officials, the TBM responsible for the breakthrough had been advancing from the Kolathur ramp since late May, covering just under 250 metres to reach the north end of the station. Engineers contended with unusually shallow soil cover above the tunnel alignment and a steep gradient, working below a heavily used arterial road without disrupting surface traffic or affecting neighbouring settlements. “It has been a technically sensitive stretch requiring round-the-clock geotechnical monitoring,” an engineer involved in the operation said. What makes the milestone particularly notable is that, almost precisely at the moment of breakthrough, another TBM was flagged off from Kolathur’s south shaft to carve a 1-kilometre path towards Srinivasa Nagar.
This stretch is expected to be one of the more demanding segments of Phase 2 because of varying rock conditions and a tight horizontal curve. Officials described the synchronised breakthrough-and-launch strategy as a deliberate move to optimise time and reduce project-level bottlenecks, especially on a corridor expected to significantly improve commutes across the northern suburbs. Industry observers note that the Chennai Metro Rail project has increasingly become a testing ground for advanced engineering methods that aim to minimise disruption for local communities. Unlike many infrastructure projects that trigger road closures, noise complaints and commercial displacement, the construction team has prioritised mitigation planning. Residents and shop owners in the busy Kolathur zone were able to continue daily activity without relocation — a positive development in a city where urban expansion is often associated with socio-spatial strain. Phase 2 of the Chennai Metro spans nearly 120 kilometres across three corridors, including a substantial underground component.
Planners believe the network will encourage a modal shift from private vehicles towards mass rapid transit, easing congestion and helping the city reduce transport-linked emissions. While the metro alone cannot address broader urban inequalities, experts argue that reliable public transport widens access to jobs, education and healthcare — making mobility a foundational pillar of an inclusive city. More civil and systems works remain before Kolathur becomes operational, and tunnelling on Corridor 5 is expected to continue through next year. For commuters and businesses across north Chennai, however, the latest milestone is a promising indicator that the Phase 2 rollout is gaining momentum. As cities across India adapt to the twin pressures of population growth and climate risk, the Chennai Metro’s progress underscores the importance of high-quality public transport in shaping resilient and equitable urban futures.
Chennai Pushes Sustainable Mobility With TBM Feat
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