ANVT Railway Station Information and Trains for ANVT

ANAND VIHAR TERMINAL - ANVT

This station was officially inaugurated on 19 December 2009 by the then Union Ministry of Railways (India) Mamata Banerjee, and the List of Chief Ministers of Delhi Sheila Dixit. The terminal, spread over is one of the largest railway stations and will cater to all East–bound trains from Delhi after the second phase becomes operational.

passing Anand Vihar with a WAP 7 locomotive

The city of Delhi heavily depends on the Rail transport to cater for the increasing load of passengers to their destinations. The long-distance trains from Delhi used to ply from three stations namely Delhi Junction Railway Station (Old Delhi), New Delhi Railway Station and Hazrat Nizamuddin Railway Stations. These stations lacked the infrastructure facilities to handle such high passenger rush. Also, Delhi is the connecting station for the cities in the Northern states Punjab (India), Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Jammu and Kashmir. With increasing passenger pressure at the existing stations, the requirement of additional major passenger terminals was identified by the Northern Railway Zone (India). The East-bound trains from Delhi to the states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa, India, Jharkhand West Bengal and other North East India had to cross the bridge over River Yamuna as all the three stations are located on the other side of the river. Thus, the area of Anand Vihar was selected in the trans-Yamuna region to construct a mega-railway terminal. The station was commissioned in the 2003 rail budget and in December 2003, Northern Railway floated a tender to employ consultants for Phase-I of Anand Vihar railway station project. The foundation stone of the station was laid by the then Union Minister of Railways, Nitish Kumar on 25 January 2004. The first phase was expected to be completed by 2006.

Due to the delay caused by various reasons, the construction was started by the Northern Railway Zone (India) in October 2006. The deadline for completion of the first phase was initially mid-2007 which was later revised to March 2008 due to various reasons. The station was finally declared clear for public use by the Commissioner of Railway Safety on 20 October 2009 and was officially inaugurated on 19 December 2009 by the Former Union Ministry of Railways (India), Mamata Banerjee and then List of Chief Ministers of Delhi, Sheila Dikshit. However, regular trains starting to ply from 10 March 2010 Northern Railways planned to shift around six more regular trains to Anand Vihar by mid-July and also open the tender inviting global consultancies to propose a masterplan for the station Phase-II which also included augmenting the number of platforms to 7 from the existing 3 platforms in the Phase-I of the project.

at Navi Mumbai which served as a model for Anand Vihar stationThe new terminal was developed to decongest the New Delhi Railway Station, Delhi Junction (Old Delhi) and Hazrat Nizamuddin Railway Station. The terminal is modelled on the lines of the Vashi railway station station at Navi Mumbai. The new terminal also helped to relieve congestion on roads into New Delhi, reducing the load of a million people daily entering the city. The railway terminal is integrated with the Anand Vihar Inter State Bus Terminals (Swami Vivekanand Inter State Bus Terminus) and the Anand Vihar (Delhi Metro) of the Delhi Metro located close by, thus transforming it into a major transportation hub of Delhi. Further, widening of the rail overbridge at Anand Vihar is planned as the current structure is not capable for handling the traffic.

Phase I of the two-storey railway station was inaugurated on 19 December 2009 with three Railway platform, a coach maintenance yard and feeder lines to the Sahibabad Junction. This phase cost and took five years to be completed. In the inauguration two new trains - the Anand Vihar-Lucknow Special Train and the Ghaziabad, India-New Delhi Ladies Special Train were flagged off. A Delhi-Panipat Electric multiple unit with number of coaches augmented from 12 to 15 was also inaugurated. The two passenger trains to West Bengal-New Jalpaiguri Express and Farakka Express will be shifted to run from this terminal. Further, three existing trains running from Hazrat Nizamuddin Railway Station and New Delhi Railway Station stations to Varanasi, Jogbani and Motihari will be shifted to the new terminal to originate from there from March onwards. While the original deadline for completion of the first phase was mid-2007, it was revised to March 2008 and the project was delayed further due to various reasons. Gradually many trains were shifted from New Delhi and other stations to Anand Vihar. A number of Electric multiple units of the Delhi Suburban Railway pass through the station. Along with that several special trains are run from the station to accommodate the heavy rush of passengers.

In the phase II the number of platforms will be increased to seven in total and the terminal will have a capacity to handle over three lakh passengers and as many as 270 trains daily. The total cost of the terminal is estimated to be around including the cost of the phase I and it would have a new Passenger Reservation system (PRS). Phase II of the Anand Vihar makeover involves linking of this terminal with the original Anand Vihar station (Station code: ANVR) which is a roadside station comprising two platforms serviced by only sub-urban trains. Northern Railways invited a consultant for Phase-II of Anand Vihar for upgrading the station with world class facilities.

The station has facilities like booking office, booking counters, waiting halls with facilities for handicapped passengers, high speed wifi, separate arrival and departure areas, reservation halls, toilets, parcel and luggage office, operational and service accommodation and parking areas. There is one cloak room as well at the first floor. The station also has some modern amenities like Automated teller machines, a touch-screen enquiry system, foreign exchange counters, commercial and maintenance offices, food plazas, and a computerised ticketing facility. Retiring rooms and dormitories are also provided in the station building. The terminal has a separate parcel loading facility, two escalators and six lifts and a special heritage gallery and custom-made subways which can be used by physically challenged passengers. It will also be the only station in the country where loading and unloading of parcels, linen and food items will be carried out at the station yard and not in the platform as per the prevailing practise, to keep the platforms clean. There is also a foot-over bridge for pedestrians which connects the railway station to the Delhi metro station at Anand Vihar.