Kalkaji Mandir metro station

The Kalkaji Mandir metro station is an interchange station between the Violet Line and the Magenta Line of Delhi Metro.[2] It serves the area of Kalkaji in South-East Delhi, and provides access to many tourist sites such as Kalkaji Mandir, Lotus Temple, Prachin Bhairav Mandir and ISKCON Temple.[3] The station was opened along with the first section of the Violet Line from Central Secretariat - Sarita Vihar on 3 October 2010, in time for the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony on the same day.[4] Its interchange with the Magenta Line was opened on 25 December 2017.[5]


Kalkaji Mandir
Logo of the Delhi Metro Delhi Metro station
General information
LocationBlock 9, Kalkaji, South-East Delhi, Delhi - 110019
Coordinates28°32′57.1″N 77°15′32.4″E / 28.549194°N 77.259000°E / 28.549194; 77.259000
Owned byDelhi Metro
Line(s)Violet Line Magenta Line
Platforms
Tracks4
Construction
Structure typeViolet Line - Elevated
Magenta Line - Underground
Depth17 m (56 ft) (Magenta Line)
Platform levels2
ParkingCar parking Available
AccessibleYes Disabled access
Other information
Station codeKJMD
History
Opened
  • Violet Line - 3 October 2010; 13 years ago (2010-10-03)
  • Magenta Line - 25 December 2017; 6 years ago (2017-12-25)
Electrified25 kV 50 Hz AC through overhead catenary
Passengers
October 201991,595[1]
October 2023108,633[1]Increase 18.6%
Services
Preceding station Logo of the Delhi Metro Delhi Metro Following station
Nehru Place Violet Line Govindpuri
Nehru Enclave Magenta Line Okhla NSIC
Location
Map

The Violet Line station is elevated while the Magenta Line station is underground. Both of these are connected by a 260 m (850 ft) long pedestrian bridge.[6] The underground station is situated at a depth of 17 m (56 ft) and both of its tracks pass through a single-tube twin tunnel, which was constructed using the New Austrian tunneling method (NATM). This had to be done because the station had to pass beneath the operational Violet Line.[7]

Station layout edit

Violet Line Station Layout

P Side platform | Doors will open on the left  
Platform 1
Southbound
Towards → Raja Nahar Singh next station is Govindpuri
Platform 2
Northbound
Towards ← Kashmere Gate next station is Nehru Place
Side platform | Doors will open on the left  
C Concourse Fare control, station agent, metro card vending machines, crossover
G Street Level Gates

Magenta Line Station layout

P Side platform | Doors will open on the left  
Platform 3
Eastbound
Towards → Botanical Garden next station is Okhla NSIC
Platform 4
Westbound
Towards ← Janakpuri West next station is Nehru Enclave
Side platform | Doors will open on the left  
C Concourse Fare control, station agent, metro card vending machines, crossover
G Street Level Gates

Connections edit

Bus edit

  • DTC buses: DTC bus routes numbers 8A, 244, 306, 374, 375, 412, 424, 427, 427A, 428, 440A, 442, 445A, 447, 465, 465A, 492, 493, 511, 511A, 511ALNKSTL, 529, 529SPL, 534, 534A, 534CLVIA, 534VIA2, 544A, 567A, 568A, 724, 724EXT, 727LSTL, 751LSTL, 764, 764B, 764EXT, 874, 930, 964, CBD-3 (+), and CBD-3 (-) serve the station from nearby Nehru Place bus terminal.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Agarwal, Priyangi (1 December 2023). "How new interchange stations are taking load off Delhi Metro hubs". Times of India. New Delhi. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  2. ^ "Kalkaji Mandir". delhimetrorail.com. Delhi Metro Rail Corporation. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Ward 175, Kalkaji" (PDF). sec.delhi.gov.in. State Election Commission, Delhi. 13 October 2023. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  4. ^ "Commonwealth Games: Spectators suffer Metro, security chaos". Times of India. New Delhi. 4 October 2010. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  5. ^ Lakhani, Somya (18 December 2017). "Delhi Metro's Magenta line to be inaugurated by PM Modi on December 25". Indian Express. New Delhi. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  6. ^ Haidar, Faizan (22 October 2017). "First look: The Delhi Metro station connecting Kalkaji temple, Lotus temple, Nehru Place". Hindustan Times. New Delhi. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  7. ^ Rajput, Abhinav (19 August 2016). "Delhi Metro Phase-3: A feat of engineering". Hindustan Times. New Delhi. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  8. ^ "Nehru Place Terminal". google.com. businfo.dimts.in. Retrieved 11 December 2023.

External links edit