Indore Junction railway station

Summary

Indore Junction (station code: INDB) is one of the Railway junctions in Madhya Pradesh and serves Indore, the commercial capital of Central India. The railway station of Indore Junction BG (future Indore Central) falls under the administrative control of Western Railway zone of Indian Railways. It consists of six main railway platforms. The Ujjain–Indore route and Indore Junction was electrified in 2011. The Station is located 1 km away from the city centre. It is one of the ISO Certified Railway Stations of India.[1]

Indore JunctionIndore Railway station.
इंदौर जंक्शन रेलवे स्टेशन
Express, Suburban train and Passenger train station
Indore Central railway station
General information
LocationIndore, Madhya Pradesh
India
Coordinates22°43′00″N 75°52′04″E / 22.71667°N 75.86778°E / 22.71667; 75.86778
Elevation550.20 m (1,805 ft)
Owned byIndian Railways
Operated byIndore Sub-Railway Division
Line(s)Akola–Ratlam line, Indore–Dahod line, Indore-Dewas-Ujjain section
Platforms6
Tracks06
ConnectionsIndore Metro, Airport Express, Bus stop, iBus, Taxi stand, Auto stand, E-rickshaw
Construction
Structure typeStandard (on-ground station)
Platform levels01
ParkingAvailable
Bicycle facilitiesAvailable
AccessibleDisabled access
Other information
StatusActive
Station codeINDB
Fare zoneWestern Railway zone
History
Opened1893; 131 years ago (1893)
Rebuilt1921; 103 years ago (1921)
Electrified2011; 13 years ago (2011)
Previous namesIndore Junction
Passengers
41,00,000
Services
Preceding station Indian Railways Following station
Saifee Nagar
towards ?
Western Railway zone Laxmibai Nagar Junction
towards ?
Route map
Durg
Rewa
Raipur
Satna
Bilaspur
Anuppur
Katni
Katni Murwara
Jabalpur
Damoh
Madan Mahal
Gadarwara
Sagar
Pipariya
Sehore
Itarsi
Jhansi
Maksi
Dewas
Ujjain
Indore
Ratlam
Location
Indore JunctionIndore Railway station. इंदौर जंक्शन रेलवे स्टेशन is located in Madhya Pradesh
Indore JunctionIndore Railway station. इंदौर जंक्शन रेलवे स्टेशन
Indore JunctionIndore Railway station.
इंदौर जंक्शन रेलवे स्टेशन
Location within Madhya Pradesh
Map
Interactive map

History edit

Holkar State Railway edit

His Highness the Maharajah Holkar of Indore Sawai Shri Tukojirao Holkar II, in 1870, offered a loan of £10 million sterling for the construction of a rail-line to his capital city of Indore, taking off from the Great Indian Peninsula (G.I.P.) Railway main line.[2] A quick survey was made and Khandwa on the G.I.P. line was chosen as junction point. The alignment was to pass through Sanawad, Kheree Ghat on the Narmada River and then by way of the Choral Valley up the slopes of the Vindhyas to Indore. Maharaja Holkar's contribution accelerated the construction of rail-lines in Malwa region.

During 1870s, a rail line of Holkar State Railway was sanctioned between Khandwa and Indore passing the Mhow Ghat.[3] The Holkar Railway required very heavy works due to very steep gradients (up to 1 in 40) on the Vindhya Ghats. It also involved digging of 4 tunnels aggregating 510 yards in length, deep cuttings and heavy retaining walls. River Narmada was crossed by a bridge of 14 spans, 197 feet each and piers 80 feet above low water level. There are 14 other large bridges with high piers, the highest pier being 152 feet above the bottom of the ravine. The first section Khandwa–Sanawad was opened for traffic on 1.12.1874. The Narmada Bridge was opened for traffic on 5.10.1876 by His Highness the Maharaja of Holkar who named it ‘Holkar-Narmada Bridge’.[4]

Scindia–Neemuch Railway edit

Surveys between Indore and Neemuch started long back in 1871–72 when the plan and estimates for the whole project was submitted to the Government of India in 1872–73. Maharaja Jayajirao Scindia of Gwalior agreed to grant a loan of Rs. 7.5 million at 4 per cent per annum interest for the project and the railway was renamed as ‘Scindia–Neemuch Railway’. It also included a branch line to Ujjain from Indore. The Indore–Ujjain branch line was opened in August 1876 and the line was completed in 1879–80.

Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway edit

During the period 1881-1882, the Holkar Railway and Scindia Neemuch Railway merged under a single management and were renamed Rajputana Malwa Railway. In 1882, KhandwaIndore line extended to Ajmer. The identity of Rajputana Malwa Railway remained for a very short while and its management was taken over by Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway Company on 1 January 1885 till 1951.[5]

Western Railway edit

Indore railway station was reconstructed by B.B. & C.I.company in the year 1921. On 5 November 1951, Western Railway with its headquarters at Mumbai came into existence after merging of B.B. & C.I.Railway with the other State Railways and overtook the administration of Indore Junction. The broad-gauge portion was extended from UjjainMaksi–Indore in 1964–66 and the doubling of the Indore–Bhopal sections was completed in during 1993–2001.

Connectivity edit

The Indore Junction is connected with Ujjain Junction to the north west, Mhow Cantonment to the south, Dewas Junction to the north and Khandwa Junction to the south east. Being a junction station, it is well connected to Jaipur, Kota, Lucknow, Ahmedabad, Mumbai, New Delhi, Bhopal, Ujjain, Gwalior, Jabalpur, Rewa, Gadarwara, Betul, Katni, Chhindwara, Khandwa, Ratlam and Bina within the state.

The station is well-connected to major stations of India such as Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Nagpur, Kota, Dehradun, Kolkata, Jodhpur, Jammu, Bilaspur, Pune, Bangalore, Udaipur, Jhansi, Amritsar and Patna.

Electrification edit

Western Railway started the electrification of UjjainIndore & DewasMaksi in the period of 2007–08 & completed in June 2012. A trial run of a special inspection saloon was also conducted on the newly laid system build at a cost of Rs 70 crore.[6]

Developments edit

The construction of two new platforms is done, which was approved earlier by the Western Railways (WR). The Indore railway station now has a modern station complex developed by the Western Railway's Ratlam railway division close to Rajkumar railway overbridge. This elevated structure would offer commuters space at the ground floor and have ticket booking counters, waiting halls, etc. on the first floor. The complex offer's sufficient parking facilities.[7] The facility would be equipped with division's first underpass. A multi-storey parking facility is also under construction in the station premises. Now there are six platforms in Indore junction (BG). At present the conversion of Indore – Khandwa (meter-gauge) to (broad-gauge) rail line is in progress. A new line from Indore (Jn) to Dahod (Jn) is also work in progress. Both rail lines would be completed in years 2022 and 2023 respectively. Recently CCEA also Sanctioned Gadarwara(Narsinghpur) -Indore new rail line via Budni. This will decrease the distance between Indore and Jabalpur by 90 km. Also the Ministry of Shipping has approved Indore–Manmad Rail line. Then rail lines would increase the connectivity of Indore with Mumbai.

Suburban trains edit

Indore Suburban
Railway System
Legend
Fatehabad Jn
 
 
Dewas Junction
Ajnod
 
 
Barlai
Balauda Takun
 
 
Dakacha
Palia
 
 
Mangliagaon
 
 
 
Laxmibai Nagar Jn
Platforms 5-6
 
Indore Junction
Platforms 1-4
 
Indore Junction
 
 
Rau
 
Mhow
 
Patalpani
 
Kalakund
 
Choral River
 
Choral

The Indore Suburban Railway is a commuter rail system serving the Indore Metropolitan Region. It is operated by Indian Railways' zonal Western Railways (WR). It has the highest passenger density of any urban railway system in Madhya Pradesh. The trains plying on its routes are commonly referred to as local trains or simply as locals.

Major trains edit

These trains start from Indore Junction railway station:

Number Train To Type
12227/28 Mumbai Central–Indore Duronto Express Mumbai Central & Duronto Express
12415/16 Indore–New Delhi Intercity Express New Delhi Intercity Superfast Express
12465/66 Ranthambore Express Jodhpur & Ranthambore Superfast Express
12913/14 Indore–Nagpur Tri Shatabdi Express Nagpur Express
12923/24 Indore–Nagpur Express Nagpur Superfast Express
12961/62 Avantika Express Mumbai Central & Avantika Superfast Express
12973/74 Indore–Jaipur Superfast Express Jaipur Superfast Express
14317/18 Indore–Dehradun Express Dehradun Express
14319/20 Indore–Bareilly Weekly Express Bareilly Weekly Express
14801/02 Jodhpur–Indore Express Jodhpur via Chittaurgarh Express
18233/34 Narmada Express Bilaspur & Narmada Express
19303/04 Indore–Bhopal Express Bhopal Express
19305/06 Indore–Kamakhya Weekly Express Kamakhya Weekly Express
19307/08 Indore–Chandigarh Express Chandigarh Weekly Express
19309/10 Shanti Express Gandhinagar via Ahmedabad Express
19311/12 Indore–Pune Express (via Panvel) Pune via Panvel Express
19313/14 Indore–Patna Express Rajendra Nagar Terminal (Patna) Bi-Weekly Express
19315/16 Lingampalli–Indore Humsafar Express Lingampalli & Humsafar Express
19317/18 Indore–Puri Humsafar Express Puri & Humsafar Express
19319/20 Veraval–Indore Mahamana Express Veraval & Mahamana Express
19321/22 Indore–Patna Express Rajendra Nagar Terminal (Patna) Express
19325/26 Indore–Amritsar Express Amritsar Express
19329/30 Veer Bhumi Chittaurgarh Express Asarva (Ahmedabad) Express
19331/32 Kochuveli–Indore Weekly Express Kochuveli Weekly Express
19333/34 Indore–Bikaner Mahamana Express Bikaner & Mahamana Express
19335/36 Gandhidham–Indore Weekly Express Gandhidham Weekly Express
19337/38 Indore–Delhi Sarai Rohilla Weekly Express Delhi Sarai Rohilla Weekly Express
22191/92 Jabalpur–Indore Overnight Express Jabalpur Overnight Superfast Express
22645/46 Ahilyanagari Express Thiruvananthapuram & Ahilyanagari Superfast Express
22911/12 Shipra Express Howrah & Shipra Superfast Express
22941/42 Indore–Jammu Tawi Weekly Superfast Express Jammu Tawi Weekly Superfast Express
22943/44 Indore–Pune Superfast Express Pune Superfast Express
22983/84 Indore–Kota Intercity Express Kota Intercity Superfast Express

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Railway Stations in Indore - Facilities, Famous Food & Restaurants - TravelKhana". 28 October 2014.
  2. ^ "Holkars Of Indore". Archived from the original on 30 October 2013.
  3. ^ "IR History: Part – II (1870–1899)". IRFCA. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  4. ^ "History of Ratlam Division" (PDF). Western Railway.
  5. ^ "A Parsi engine driver's wage slip of 1932". Railways of Raj Blog.
  6. ^ "Electric trains to run on new Indore–Ujjain track". The Economic Times. Retrieved 23 June 2012.
  7. ^ "Indore have a modern station complex". Daily News and Analysis. Retrieved 9 January 2019.

External links edit

  • Ratlam Division, WR Website [1]