A Long-Pending Coastal Link Is Finally Moving
Chennai’s long-awaited OMR–ECR Link Road has reached a decisive execution stage with the approval and initiation of a six-lane high-level steel bridge across the Buckingham Canal at Thoraipakkam. The bridge forms the core of a ₹270 crore infrastructure project aimed at creating seamless connectivity between the city’s two most critical corridors—Rajiv Gandhi Salai (OMR) and East Coast Road (ECR).
Steel Bridge Specifications
- Structure: Six-lane high-level steel bridge
- Bridge cost: ₹36 crore
- Vertical clearance: 4 metres above the high-tide line
- Purpose: Allows uninterrupted boat movement under the bridge as per inland waterway norms
- Role: Critical canal crossing enabling direct OMR–ECR traffic flow
This clearance requirement is one of the main reasons a high-level structure was chosen instead of a conventional low bridge.
Alignment and Road Connectivity
- Take-off point: Extension of the Pallavaram–Thoraipakkam Radial Road
- Landing point: Around 200 metres before ECR, on the Neelankarai side
- Additional works: A 680-metre road stretch will be extended up to the bridge once encroachments are cleared
This alignment creates a direct, signal-free coastal connector, significantly reducing travel time between South Chennai’s IT corridor and beach-side residential zones.
Project Cost Breakdown
- Total project cost: ₹270 crore
- Land acquisition alone: ~₹200 crore
- Road laying + bridge civil works: ~₹70 crore
The numbers make one thing clear: land acquisition is the biggest cost driver, not construction.
House Relocation and Land Acquisition
Thoraipakkam (Buckingham Canal side)
- 58 families to be relocated
- Settled on Water Resources Department (WRD) land
- Relocation through Tamil Nadu Urban Habitat Development Board
- Cost per tenement: ₹3.5 lakh
- Beneficiaries already enumerated by Greater Chennai Corporation, notices issued
Once these families move, the road extension up to the bridge take-off point will begin.
Neelankarai (ECR side)
- 63 families affected
- Located on patta lands
- Some landowners have approached the court
- Orders reserved, making this the only active delay risk in the project
Clearances Secured: Why the Project Is Now Unstoppable
The Highways Department has obtained all major statutory approvals:
- Clearance from the Inland Waterway Authority
- No-Objection Certificate (NOC) from the Water Resources Department (WRD)
- Approval from the State Level Environment Impact Assessment Authority
With regulatory hurdles cleared, execution now depends largely on final land handover.
Local Residents’ View
The Federation of Thoraipakkam Residents’ Welfare Associations has welcomed the improved ECR connectivity but stressed the need for:
- Safe pedestrian walkways
- Proper crossing facilities on the radial road
Without these, the corridor risks becoming vehicle-heavy and unsafe for local residents.
For Property Buyers and Landowners
- Land parcels near canals, radial roads, and proposed ROWs carry high acquisition risk
- Patta alone does not guarantee safety if land falls within notified infrastructure alignment
- Buyers should always verify:
- Road alignment plans
- Right-of-Way (ROW) widths
- WRD and Highways land ownership boundaries
At Verified.RealEstate, such risks are typically identified through alignment verification, patta–survey cross-checks, and authority-level document validation before a transaction is completed.
