<div dir="ltr">A British-era bridge on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, popularly called the Amrutanjan Bridge, has been brought down.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The bridge was not in use and its levelling will speed up the traffic from Mumbai, the financial capital of India, to Pune, the cultural capital of Maharashtra.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The 189-year-old bridge was brought down on Sunday and the rest of the work will continue for a week.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The Mumbai-Pune Expressway, formally named Yashwantrao Chavan Expressway and popularly called E-Way, was built by the Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation, and was the first expressway of India.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The bridge was built by a British engineer, Captain Hughes in 1830 and later, credited for laying the foundations of the Mumbai-Pune rail links on the Sahyadri ranges of Western Ghats.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The Amrutanjan Bridge got its name from a giant hoarding for an outdoor advertisement of the pain relief balm.</div>.<div dir="ltr">It had become a major traffic hindrance and cause of many accidents on the country’s first and busy road.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />However, because of the lockdown, there is no movement except for official vehicles and those carrying essential commodities, medical equipment and medicine. The MSRDC used the lean period to demolish it.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />Though the bridge was unused for several decades, a structural audit a few years ago cautioned that its condition was not sound and it could collapse, posing a risk to the e-way traffic.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />Though the expressway is six-laned, around the bridge, it became a four-laned 'S'-shaped bottleneck, slowing the traffic, creating snarls and upping accidents especially during morning-evening peak hours and weekends.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The massive wide pillars of the bridge, between the hill-stretch of Khandala-Lonavala in the Raigad district stretch of the 100-kms expressway, occupied the space for about two lanes.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />According to estimates, around 10 to 15 minutes will be saved during a one-way journey.</div>
<div dir="ltr">A British-era bridge on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, popularly called the Amrutanjan Bridge, has been brought down.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The bridge was not in use and its levelling will speed up the traffic from Mumbai, the financial capital of India, to Pune, the cultural capital of Maharashtra.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The 189-year-old bridge was brought down on Sunday and the rest of the work will continue for a week.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The Mumbai-Pune Expressway, formally named Yashwantrao Chavan Expressway and popularly called E-Way, was built by the Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation, and was the first expressway of India.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The bridge was built by a British engineer, Captain Hughes in 1830 and later, credited for laying the foundations of the Mumbai-Pune rail links on the Sahyadri ranges of Western Ghats.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The Amrutanjan Bridge got its name from a giant hoarding for an outdoor advertisement of the pain relief balm.</div>.<div dir="ltr">It had become a major traffic hindrance and cause of many accidents on the country’s first and busy road.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />However, because of the lockdown, there is no movement except for official vehicles and those carrying essential commodities, medical equipment and medicine. The MSRDC used the lean period to demolish it.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />Though the bridge was unused for several decades, a structural audit a few years ago cautioned that its condition was not sound and it could collapse, posing a risk to the e-way traffic.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />Though the expressway is six-laned, around the bridge, it became a four-laned 'S'-shaped bottleneck, slowing the traffic, creating snarls and upping accidents especially during morning-evening peak hours and weekends.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />The massive wide pillars of the bridge, between the hill-stretch of Khandala-Lonavala in the Raigad district stretch of the 100-kms expressway, occupied the space for about two lanes.</div>.<div dir="ltr"><br />According to estimates, around 10 to 15 minutes will be saved during a one-way journey.</div>