Chennai Plans Massive Road Relaying Drive From Feb With Rs 200 Cr Sanction, Contractors Wary Of Funds
The works will focus on some of the worst-affected stretches battered by recent rains, particularly in Adyar, Teynampet, Kodambakkam, West Mambalam and Anna Nagar.
In addition to surface roads, about five key underpasses -- including the Nungambakkam, Madley Road and Stanley Government Hospital subways -- will also be relaid.
Officials said necessary traffic diversions would be implemented to facilitate the uninterrupted execution of the works.
The road relaying drive follows a major financial sanction by the Tamil Nadu government, which on Thursday approved Rs 1,500 crore for road restoration works across 21 municipal corporations in the state. Of this, Chennai is expected to receive approximately Rs 200 crore.
Deputy Mayor Mahesh Kumar said that all GCC zones have already finalised their lists of damaged roads, and detailed proposals have been forwarded to the Ripon Buildings headquarters.“We will place the proposals before the council meeting this month and fast-track the relaying works by February. We aim to complete most of the work by mid-February,” he said.
To ensure better construction standards, the corporation also plans to appoint a project management consultant to independently vet the quality of road works. A separate tender for this consultancy is expected to be floated simultaneously with the main road relaying tenders.
However, contractors remain sceptical about whether the ambitious timeline can be met, citing delays in the actual release of funds. Greater Chennai Contractors Association president R. Ramarao said that despite multiple financial sanctions in recent months, pending payments have continued to mount.
“Even after sanctions are announced, funds are not released on time. The total dues for civic works have increased to nearly Rs 900 crore from Rs 700 crore just last week,” Ramarao said.
“At present, the corporation has no liquidity to execute new projects. Most tenders are being floated in anticipation of future funds. Until the money actually comes, these remain announcements on paper.”
With public frustration over damaged roads mounting, the coming weeks will test whether the promised relaying works can move from plans to pavement.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment