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The Great Indian Expressway Paradox: When Empty Roads Become a Measure of Success

How High-Speed Corridors, Sky-High Tolls, and a Two-Tier Infrastructure Model Are Redefining the Meaning of "Progress" in Uttar Pradesh   At first glance, the Agra-Lucknow Expressway appears to be a spectacular failure. A six-lane, access-controlled corridor stretching 302 kilometres, it often carries barely a fraction of its designed capacity, while the old National Highway 19 remains choked with honking trucks, sputtering tractors, and frustrated commuters. Yet this apparent emptiness is not a design flaw—it is, astonishingly, the entire point. This article unpacks the contradictions at the heart of India's greenfield expressway policy: why authorities deliberately keep tolls high to preserve "emptiness," how the newly inaugurated Ganga Expressway doubles down on the same premium-first strategy, and whether this two-tier system represents visionary long-term planning or a monumental case of infrastructure segregation.   Introduction: The Great Infras...

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