By the NewsPatron Editorial Desk
In India, we often confuse “infrastructure” with “progress.” We see concrete pouring and ribbons cutting, and we assume we are moving forward. But sometimes, what is sold as a bridge to the future is actually a trap door to disaster.
The new double-decker flyover on Metro Line 9 in Mira-Bhayandar is not just a traffic solution; it is a case study in bureaucratic negligence.
We are looking at a structure that funnels four lanes of high-speed traffic into two lanes with a sudden, geometric violence that defies basic engineering logic. This isn’t a “teething issue.” This is a design flaw. And if history is any judge, it is a design flaw that will be measured in human lives.
The “Cyrus Mistry” Echo: Physics Doesn’t Care About Excuses
Let’s be blunt. We have seen this movie before.
In 2022, former Tata Chairman Cyrus Mistry lost his life on the Surya River bridge. The cause? A three-lane highway that abruptly, without warning or logic, narrowed into two lanes.
The Mira-Bhayandar flyover is repeating this deadly geometry. According to civil engineers and urban planners, the flyover features a sharp “4-to-2 lane” bottleneck without the necessary gradual tapers required for safe merging.
The Contractor: A Resume of “Near-Fatal” Lapses
Who is building this? J Kumar Infraprojects (JKIL). If that name sounds familiar, it should. Their track record on this very project reads less like a portfolio and more like a warning label.
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- September 2025: A 30kg iron jack plummets from their construction site into a public area. It was described as a “near-fatal lapse”.
- October 2025: Fire sparks drip from welding works onto live traffic below.
The MMRDA has issued fines—?10 lakh here, ?5 lakh there. But let’s be real: For a project worth hundreds of crores, a ?15 lakh penalty is not a punishment; it’s a rounding error. It is the cost of doing business.
The “Future Expansion” Alibi
When confronted by activists like Anjali Damania and other citizen watchdogs, the MMRDA’s defense was predictable: “It’s not a flaw; it’s for future expansion.”
They claim the “Right of Way” constraints forced this design and that the missing lanes will be added “in the future.” This is the classic bureaucratic gamble. They are prioritizing a future plan over your present safety. Since when does “future expansion” justify “present danger”?
The Verdict: Delay It or Own It
The stakes are simple. If this flyover opens in its current state, the first major accident won’t be an “accident.” It will be an inevitability.
The citizens have done their job. They have flagged the risk. They have tagged the Ministers. They have drawn the diagrams. Now, the burden of accountability shifts to the MMRDA and the Maharashtra Government.
Do not rush the ribbon cutting. Do not hide behind “future plans.” Fix the taper. Install the barriers. Audit the safety. Because a delayed bridge is an inconvenience, but a deadly bridge is a crime.

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