City
Epaper

180 bridges inspected ahead of monsoon in Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Jalna

By Lokmat English Desk | Updated: June 15, 2025 21:40 IST

Lokmat News NetworkChhatrapati SambhajinagarPre-monsoon inspections of 180 bridges across Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar and Jalna districts have been completed, ...

Open in App

Lokmat News Network

Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar

Pre-monsoon inspections of 180 bridges across Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar and Jalna districts have been completed, confirmed Public Works Department (PWD) Superintendent Engineer S.S. Bhagat. Each bridge, roughly 30 meters long, has been assessed, and no open bridge is currently marked unsafe.

The region includes 80 bridges in Sambhajinagar and 100 in Jalna. None were built during the Nizam or British era, Bhagat said. Following the Maval bridge collapse, the state has called for a state-wide bridge audit. A second round of inspections may follow. Meanwhile, Rs 1 crore has been sanctioned to repair a hollow foundation found at the Godavari River bridge in Paithan. Another Rs 10 lakh is being spent on repairs in Vaijapur.

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports3rd ODI: De Kock slams ton but Kuldeep, Krishna four-fers help India restrict SA to 270 in series decider

EntertainmentKBC: Indian cricketer Sneh Rana gets emotional as Amitabh Bachchan honours the Women’s World Cup medal

EntertainmentTimothee Chalamet dances to Soulja Boy’s track on 'Marty Supreme' press tour

National‘INDIA Bloc strong, stable and fully united in TN’: Congress on backchannel talks with Vijay

CricketIndia restrict South Africa to 270 in third ODI, Prasidh Krishna and Kuldeep Yadav scalp four wickets each

Aurangabad Realted Stories

AurangabadNight stunt menace on city roads raises safety alarm

AurangabadPM Modi has the energy of a 40-year-old, remarks CM

AurangabadMaharashtra sets new global record in solar pump installation; CM announces separate power company for farmers

AurangabadFire guts footwear shop; shoes and sandals destroyed

AurangabadMarathwada to become drought-free with major water projects