How the Mumbai–Pune Expressway Missing Link Will End Khandala Bottlenecks
The long-pending Mumbai-Pune Expressway 'Missing Link' has once again moved to the centre of public attention, following a massive traffic breakdown in the accident-prone Khandala ghat section earlier this week. A single mishap - a gas tanker overturning near the Borghat tunnels - was enough to paralyse traffic for more than 32 hours, leaving thousands of commuters stranded and underlining the urgency of completing the ambitious bypass project.
What is the Missing Link?
The Missing Link is a 13.3-kilometre, eight-lane, access-controlled highway being built by the Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC) to bypass the steep and winding Khandala-Lonavala ghat stretch on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway. The new alignment connects Khopoli on the Mumbai side directly to Kusgaon near Lonavala, cutting through challenging hill terrain instead of climbing it.
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Unlike the existing ghat section, which forces vehicles through sharp hairpin bends, steep gradients and closely spaced tunnels, the Missing Link offers a straighter, flatter and safer route. Once operational, it will shorten the overall Mumbai-Pune distance by nearly 6 km and is expected to reduce travel time by 25-30 minutes under normal traffic conditions.
Engineering at a scale rarely seen
The project is among the most complex road engineering efforts in the country. It features:
- Two twin tunnels measuring approximately 1.75 km and 8.9 km, designed to handle heavy traffic safely
- Two cable-stayed bridges, including a 650-metre structure over Tiger Valley with pylons rising 182 metres, making them the tallest road pylons in India
- A series of viaducts, minor bridges and culverts spanning deep valleys and unstable slopes
Built on a 100-metre-wide right of way, the highway is designed to handle high-speed traffic without the bottlenecks typical of ghat roads.
Cost and delays
Approved by the Maharashtra cabinet in June 2017, the project is being executed on an EPC (Engineering, Procurement and Construction) basis at an estimated cost of Rs 6,600-6,695 crore. While it was originally slated to open in March 2024, multiple factors - including heavy monsoon rains, high winds, complex geology and stringent safety requirements - pushed the timeline back.
As of early 2026, MSRDC officials say 96-98% of the work is complete, with commissioning now targeted for May or mid-2026. Authorities have repeatedly stressed that the project will not be rushed at the cost of safety, given the difficult terrain.
Why the Missing Link is crucial
The recent traffic nightmare near Khandala explains the project's importance better than any technical report. At present, vehicles heading between Mumbai and Pune must navigate nearly 19 km of vulnerable ghat roads, where a single accident, landslide or stalled vehicle can bring traffic to a standstill for hours - or even days.
The Missing Link is designed to remove this choke point entirely. By diverting traffic away from landslide-prone slopes and sharp curves, it will drastically reduce accident risk, especially for heavy vehicles carrying hazardous cargo. In emergencies, it will also ensure traffic can keep moving instead of being trapped between tunnels and cliffs.
Why early opening matters
Each delay has a real-world cost - not just in time, but in safety, fuel loss and economic disruption. The 32-hour jam this week saw congestion stretch up to 50 km, with families, transporters and emergency services caught off guard. Had the Missing Link been operational, the impact would likely have been far less severe, with traffic diverted seamlessly away from the affected stretch.
With peak summer travel, monsoon season and festival traffic ahead, pressure is mounting on authorities to open the Missing Link as soon as safety clearances are in place. Once operational, it is expected to permanently ease congestion around Lonavala-Khandala, improve travel reliability, and finally plug the most fragile gap in India's busiest expressway corridor.
In many ways, the Missing Link is no longer just an infrastructure upgrade - it has become a necessity for a route that millions depend on every year.
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