Development of Highway in India – Complete Guide for GATE & SSC JE | History, Classification & Standards

Highway Engineering · Development of Highway · GATE CE · SSC JE Civil · IRC Standards India

📌 Quick Reference — Standards Covered in This Post
IRC 3 : 1983 — Classification of Roads  |  IRC 64 : 1990 — Capacity of Roads  |  Nagpur Road Plan (1943–63)  |  Bombay Road Plan (1961–81)  |  Lucknow Road Plan (1981–2001)  |  PMGSY — Rural Road Connectivity

📋 Table of Contents

  1. Introduction — What is a Highway?
  2. History of Road Development in India
  3. Road Development Plans (Nagpur, Bombay, Lucknow, PMGSY)
  4. Classification of Roads in India
  5. Highway Authorities in India
  6. Road Network Statistics
  7. Technical Diagrams
  8. Important Formulas & Keywords
  9. GATE & SSC JE Previous Year Questions
  10. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. Introduction — What is a Highway?

A highway is a public road, especially an important road that connects towns or cities. In civil engineering, the term “highway” refers to any road that is open to public use, constructed and maintained for the movement of people, goods, and vehicles.

As a highway engineer who has cracked both GATE CE and SSC JE Civil, I can tell you one thing clearly — the Development of Highway chapter carries 4–6 marks every year in these exams. Students often skip it thinking it is “just history,” but the road lengths, plan years, and classification rules are direct MCQ material.

💡 Engineer’s Tip: Memorise the 4 Road Development Plans with their years and targets. Every SSC JE paper has at least one question from this. GATE asks conceptual questions on classification and road density.

Key Definitions (GATE/SSC Vocabulary)

  • Road — A route or path between two places (may be unpaved).
  • Highway — An improved, paved public road connecting major locations.
  • Expressway — A divided highway with full access control, no at-grade intersections.
  • Pavement — The structured surface layer of a road designed to carry traffic loads.
  • Road Density — Length of road per 100 km² of area. Formula: Road Density = Total Road Length (km) / Area (100 km²)

2. History of Road Development in India

2.1 Ancient Period (Pre-British)

India has one of the oldest road networks in the world. The Mauryan Empire (322–185 BC) under Emperor Chandragupta Maurya built the famous Uttarapatha (Grand Trunk Road concept), connecting the northwest frontier to Pataliputra (present-day Patna). Kautilya’s Arthashastra mentions road widths, drainage, and maintenance rules — perhaps the world’s first highway engineering manual!

  • Sher Shah Suri (1540–1545 AD) — Rebuilt and extended the Grand Trunk Road from Sonargaon (Bangladesh) to Peshawar (~2,400 km). Planted shady trees and built sarais (rest houses) every few miles.
  • Mughal Period — Roads were used mainly for military movement and trade. No systematic engineering standards.

2.2 British Period (1857–1947)

The British built roads primarily for military and administrative purposes. The Public Works Department (PWD) was established in 1854. Roads were classified but not systematically planned for economic development.

In 1927, the Indian Road Congress (IRC) was founded — the premier technical body for highway engineering in India, equivalent to AASHTO in the USA. The Central Road Fund was established in 1929 to fund road development from motor vehicle taxes.

⚠️ Exam Alert: “IRC was founded in 1927” is a direct MCQ fact in SSC JE. Do not confuse with 1929 (Central Road Fund) or 1943 (Nagpur Plan).

2.3 Post-Independence (1947–Present)

After independence, India launched systematic 20-year road development plans. The Nagpur Conference (1943) laid the foundation even before independence by preparing the first scientific road development plan.


3. Road Development Plans — The Most Important Section for GATE & SSC

India has had four major Road Development Plans. These are the most frequently tested topics in SSC JE and appear in GATE as well. Learn the targets vs achievements for each plan.

3.1 First Plan — Nagpur Road Plan (1943–1963)

Parameter Details
Plan Name Nagpur Road Plan
Period 1943 – 1963 (20 years)
Target Road Length 5,32,000 km
Achieved Road Length ~3,90,000 km (shortfall)
Road Density Target 16 km per 100 km² of area
Concept Star and Grid pattern for rural India
Key Feature First scientific road development plan; introduced road classification

3.2 Second Plan — Bombay Road Plan (1961–1981)

Parameter Details
Plan Name Bombay Road Plan
Period 1961 – 1981 (20 years)
Target Road Length 10,57,500 km
Road Density Target 32 km per 100 km²
Key Feature Focus on connecting every village with population >1500 to a market town

3.3 Third Plan — Lucknow Road Plan (1981–2001)

Parameter Details
Plan Name Lucknow Road Plan
Period 1981 – 2001 (20 years)
Target Road Length 15,87,000 km
Road Density Target 82 km per 100 km²
Key Feature Emphasis on improving existing roads; rural connectivity; expressways introduced

3.4 Fourth Plan — PMGSY & National Highway Development Programme (2001–Present)

Programme Full Form & Key Points
PMGSY Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana — Launched 2000; connect villages with population ≥500 (≥250 in hilly/tribal areas) with all-weather roads
NHDP Phase 1 & 2 Golden Quadrilateral (5,846 km) + North-South & East-West Corridor (7,142 km)
Golden Quadrilateral Delhi – Mumbai – Chennai – Kolkata: 5,846 km; 4/6-lane NH
Bharatmala Pariyojana Phase 1: ~34,800 km of economic corridors; launched 2017
🧠 Memory Trick for Plans:
Nagpur (1943) → Bombay (1961) → Lucknow (1981) → NHDC (2001)
Remember: “No Bull Like No one” — N, B, L, N

4. Classification of Roads in India (IRC 3 : 1983)

The Indian Road Congress classifies roads into the following categories. This is directly asked in GATE and SSC JE.

4.1 National Highways (NH)

  • Constructed and maintained by Central Government (MoRTH / NHAI)
  • Connect state capitals, major ports, border regions, and strategic locations
  • Current NH network: approx. 1,44,634 km (as of recent data)
  • Minimum carriageway width: 7.0 m (2-lane) as per IRC 73
  • Examples: NH-44 (Srinagar–Kanyakumari, longest NH ~3,745 km), NH-48 (Delhi–Chennai)

4.2 State Highways (SH)

  • Constructed and maintained by State Government (State PWD)
  • Connect district headquarters, industrial areas, and State Highways of adjacent states
  • Total SH network: approx. 1,76,818 km

4.3 Major District Roads (MDR)

  • Important roads within a district; connect taluka/tehsil headquarters
  • Maintained by District Panchayat / PWD

4.4 Other District Roads (ODR)

  • Secondary roads connecting villages to MDR/SH/NH
  • Maintained by Zila Panchayat

4.5 Village Roads (VR)

  • Roads connecting villages, farms, and rural areas to district/other roads
  • Maintained by Gram Panchayat
  • PMGSY focuses primarily on upgrading Village Roads

4.6 Expressways

  • Divided highways with full access control (no at-grade intersections, no traffic signals)
  • Design speed: 120 km/h
  • Examples: Mumbai–Pune Expressway, Yamuna Expressway, Delhi–Meerut Expressway
Road Type Authority Design Speed (Plain) Ruling Gradient
National Highway (NH) NHAI / MoRTH 100 km/h 1 in 30 (3.3%)
State Highway (SH) State PWD 80 km/h 1 in 40 (2.5%)
Major District Road District/PWD 80 km/h 1 in 40
Other District Road Zila Panchayat 65 km/h 1 in 33
Village Road Gram Panchayat 50 km/h 1 in 25 (4%)
Expressway NHAI / MSRDC 120 km/h 1 in 40

5. Highway Authorities in India

  • IRC (Indian Roads Congress) — Founded 1927; apex technical body; publishes IRC codes (IRC 37, IRC 73, etc.)
  • MoRTH (Ministry of Road Transport and Highways) — Central government ministry; policy and funding
  • NHAI (National Highways Authority of India) — Established 1988 under NHAI Act; constructs/operates NHs
  • NHIDCL (National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation) — Border and strategic NH construction
  • BRO (Border Roads Organisation) — Roads in border/strategic areas (under Ministry of Defence)
  • CRRI (Central Road Research Institute) — Research wing of CSIR; technical R&D for roads
  • State PWD — State Highways and rural roads

6. India Road Network — Key Statistics

Road Category Approx. Length (km) % of Total
National Highways 1,44,634 ~2%
State Highways 1,76,818 ~3%
District Roads (MDR+ODR) ~56,00,000 ~80%
Village Roads ~26,50,000 ~15%
Total Road Network ~63,71,847 km 2nd largest in world

Note: India has the second-largest road network in the world after the USA. This fact is frequently asked in SSC General Awareness and GATE.


7. Technical Diagrams

The following SVG diagrams are embedded directly — no external images, fast loading, fully zoomable.

Diagram 1: Timeline of Road Development Plans in India

Road Development Plans in India — Timeline Nagpur Plan 1943–1963 Target: 5,32,000 km Density: 16 km/100km² Bombay Plan 1961–1981 Target: 10,57,500 km Density: 32 km/100km² Lucknow Plan 1981–2001 Target: 15,87,000 km Density: 82 km/100km² NHDP/PMGSY 2001–Present GQ: 5,846 km Bharatmala: 34,800 km 1943 1961 1981 2001

Diagram 2: Classification of Roads in India (Hierarchy)

Classification of Roads in India — IRC 3 : 1983 ROAD NETWORK OF INDIA Total ≈ 63.7 lakh km National Highways (NH) 1,44,634 km | NHAI State Highways (SH) 1,76,818 km | State PWD Major District Roads (MDR) District/PWD Other District Roads (ODR) Zila Panchayat Village Roads (VR) Gram Panchayat Design Speed (Plain Terrain) 100 km/h 80 km/h 80 km/h 65 km/h 50 km/h Ruling Gradient (Plain) 1 in 30 (3.3%) 1 in 40 (2.5%) 1 in 40 1 in 33 1 in 25 (4%) Expressway: Design Speed 120 km/h | Full Access Control | NHAI / State SPV

Diagram 3: Golden Quadrilateral — Highway Connectivity

Golden Quadrilateral (GQ) — 5,846 km Delhi NH-48 / NH-19 Kolkata NH-19 Chennai NH-48/44 Mumbai NH-48 Delhi–Kolkata ~1,453 km Kolkata–Chennai ~1,684 km Chennai–Mumbai ~1,290 km Mumbai–Delhi ~1,419 km Golden Quadrilateral (4/6-lane NH) Total: 5,846 km | NHDP Phase 1


8. Important Formulas & Keywords for GATE / SSC

📐 Key Formulas

Road Density = Total Road Length (km) / Area (per 100 km²)
Nagpur Plan Density = 16 km/100 km²
Bombay Plan Density = 32 km/100 km²
Lucknow Plan Density = 82 km/100 km²

Stopping Sight Distance (SSD) = 0.278 V·t + V²/(254·f) [V in km/h, t = reaction time = 2.5 s]
Overtaking Sight Distance (OSD) = d₁ + d₂ + d₃ [as per IRC 66]

🔑 Keywords / Important Terms (GATE & SSC One-Liners)

  • IRC — Indian Roads Congress, founded 1927
  • NHAI — National Highways Authority of India, established 1988
  • BRO — Border Roads Organisation, established 1960
  • Nagpur Plan — 1st road plan, 1943–1963, target 5,32,000 km
  • Golden Quadrilateral — Delhi–Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata, 5,846 km
  • PMGSY — Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana, launched 2000
  • Expressway design speed120 km/h
  • NH design speed (plain)100 km/h
  • NH ruling gradient1 in 30 (3.3%)
  • India road network rank2nd largest in world
  • Longest NH in India — NH-44 (~3,745 km, Srinagar to Kanyakumari)
  • Central Road Fund — Established 1929
  • Grand Trunk Road — Originally built by Sher Shah Suri (1540–1545 AD)
  • CRRI — Central Road Research Institute (R&D body under CSIR)

9. GATE & SSC JE Previous Year Type Questions (Solved)

Q1. (SSC JE 2019) The Indian Roads Congress (IRC) was established in the year:
(a) 1929   (b) 1927   (c) 1943   (d) 1947
✅ Answer: (b) 1927
Q2. (SSC JE 2022) The Nagpur Road Plan (First 20-year road plan) was for the period:
(a) 1961–1981   (b) 1981–2001   (c) 1943–1963   (d) 1945–1965
✅ Answer: (c) 1943–1963
Q3. (GATE CE 2018) The design speed for a National Highway on plain terrain as per IRC is:
(a) 80 km/h   (b) 100 km/h   (c) 120 km/h   (d) 60 km/h
✅ Answer: (b) 100 km/h
Q4. (SSC JE 2021) The Golden Quadrilateral connects:
(a) 4 major metros   (b) 6 major ports   (c) Border cities   (d) State capitals only
✅ Answer: (a) Delhi–Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata (4 major metros), Total length 5,846 km
Q5. (GATE CE 2020) The road density target of the Lucknow Road Plan was:
(a) 16 km/100 km²   (b) 32 km/100 km²   (c) 82 km/100 km²   (d) 100 km/100 km²
✅ Answer: (c) 82 km per 100 km²

10. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is the Development of Highway in simple words?

Development of highway means the planned growth and improvement of road infrastructure in a country. In India, it refers to the history of building roads from ancient times (Mauryan roads) to modern expressways, organized through 20-year Road Development Plans starting with the Nagpur Plan in 1943.

How many road development plans are there in India?

India has had three completed 20-year plans — Nagpur (1943–63), Bombay (1961–81), Lucknow (1981–2001) — and is currently under the fourth phase which includes NHDP (National Highway Development Programme), PMGSY, and Bharatmala Pariyojana.

What is the difference between NH and SH?

National Highways (NH) are built and maintained by the Central Government (NHAI/MoRTH), connecting state capitals, major ports, and strategic locations. State Highways (SH) are built and maintained by the respective State PWD, connecting district headquarters and industrial areas within the state.

When was IRC founded and why is it important?

The Indian Roads Congress (IRC) was founded in 1927. It is the apex technical body for road engineering in India. IRC publishes all design standards (IRC 37, IRC 73, IRC SP-72, etc.) used for pavement design, highway geometry, and construction. It is directly equivalent to AASHTO in the USA.

What is the Golden Quadrilateral project?

The Golden Quadrilateral (GQ) is a flagship national highway project under NHDP Phase 1, connecting the four major metros: Delhi – Mumbai – Chennai – Kolkata. Total length is 5,846 km. It is a 4/6-lane divided highway and is one of the most important infrastructure projects in India.

What is PMGSY?

Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) was launched in 2000. Its objective is to connect every unconnected village with a population of 500 or more (250 or more in hilly/tribal/desert areas) with an all-weather road. It is funded by the Central Government and implemented through State PWDs/Rural Engineering Organisations.

What is the longest National Highway in India?

NH-44 is the longest National Highway in India, stretching approximately 3,745 km from Srinagar (J&K) to Kanyakumari (Tamil Nadu). It passes through several states including Haryana, Punjab, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu.

What is the ruling gradient for National Highway?

As per IRC standards, the ruling gradient for National Highway on plain terrain is 1 in 30 (i.e., 3.3%). This means for every 30 metres of horizontal distance, the road rises or falls 1 metre. The limiting gradient for NH is 1 in 15 (6.67%).


📚 Summary — Development of Highway (Quick Revision)

IRC Founded: 1927 | NHAI: 1988 | BRO: 1960
Nagpur Plan: 1943–63 | Bombay Plan: 1961–81 | Lucknow Plan: 1981–2001
Golden Quadrilateral: 5,846 km | PMGSY: 2000 | NH-44 longest: ~3,745 km
India road rank: 2nd largest in world | Total network: ~63.7 lakh km

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