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‘Hawa Dhundh…Aur Bridge Gir Gayi’: Story of ₹1710 Crore Bridge in Bihar’s Sultanpur

The Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways said he wondered how could an IAS officer believe such an explanation.

Updated: May 10, 2022 12:15 PM IST

By India.com News Desk | Edited by Priyanka

'Hawa Dhundh...Aur Bridge Gir Gayi': Story of ₹1710 Crore Bridge in Bihar's Sultanpur

New Delhi: Union Minister Nitin Gadkari on Monday expressed amazement at the response of an IAS officer on the collapse of a portion of an under-construction road bridge in Bihar’s Sultanganj. Here’s why. “A bridge fell in Bihar on April 29. I asked my secretary about the reasons. He (secretary) said it was on account of strong winds (hawa aur dhundh),” Gadkari said at an event.

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The road transport and highways minister said he wondered how could an IAS officer believe such an explanation. “Mere to baat samajh me nahi aa rahi hai ki hawa dhundh se kaise bridge girega? Kuch naa kuch galati hogi (I cannot understand how can a bridge collapse due to strong winds. There must be some error (which led to collapse of the bridge),” Gadkari, who is known for his frank views, added. The minister also emphasised on the need to reduce the cost of construction of bridges, without compromising on quality.

Sultanganj MLA Lalit Narayan Mandal had earlier said Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has ordered an investigation into the bridge collapse. “The possibility of using sub-standard materials in the construction of the bridge cannot be ruled out … It is a matter of investigation that the under construction bridge being built at a cost of Rs 1,710 crore could not withstand strong gusty winds,” he had said.

5 points about the collapsed bridge:

  1. A section of an under-construction road bridge over the Ganga at Sultanganj in Bihar collapsed during a thunderstorm on April 29.
  2. There were no reports of any casualty in the incident.
  3. The construction of the bridge between Sultanganj and Aguani Ghat in Bihar had started in 2014. It was due to be completed in 2019 but work on it is still on.
  4. The 3,116-metre-long bridge on completion was slated to have the country’s longest extradosed spans and a high-level observatory which would offer the users a unique view of the river.
  5. An extradosed bridge is a hybrid structure between the classic cable-stayed and cantilever-girder types.

(With inputs from PTI)

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