Image showed a train with grey body, orange-gold livery, rounded nose reminiscent of Japan’s Shinkansen, gliding along an elevated viaduct
A framed image at Gate 4 of the Ministry of Railways building in New Delhi on Monday showed a sleek, aerodynamic train — grey body, orange and gold livery, a rounded nose reminiscent of Japan’s Shinkansen — gliding along an elevated viaduct through a green landscape. It appeared the government had put a face to its most ambitious infrastructure project.
But a picture, possibly a rendering, at a ministry gate is not the actual bullet train. So where does the Mumbai-Ahmedabad High Speed Rail (MAHSR) corridor actually stand, nearly nine years after Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid its foundation stone?
What numbers say
The most authoritative recent snapshot comes from Union railway minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, whoshared construction figures as on May 4:
According to details by the minister via social media, 349 km of viaduct — the raised, bridge-like elevated structure that carries 90% of the corridor above roads, rivers and existing rail lines — has been completed along the 508-km route, along with 443 km of piers, the supporting pillars that hold the viaduct up.
Over 7,700 OHE (overhead equipment) masts, the electric poles carrying the wires that will power the trains, have been installed across 179 km of the mainline.
More than 5.7 lakh noise barriers have gone up along 288 km of the stretch, and 374 track-kilometers of track bed base construction has been completed (covering roughly 187 route kilometres), with the laying progressing incrementally.
And in Maharashtra, where construction has lagged earlier due to land acquisition constraints, 5 km of the critical 21-km tunnel between Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC) in Mumbai and Shilphata has been excavated.
The National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL), the government body executing the project, said in a February 2026 Lok Sabha reply that all 1,389.5 hectares of land required has been acquired; all statutory clearances obtained.
Speed of execution has picked up
Vaishnaw said in early May that India is now laying 15 km of high-speed rail track every month on the bullet-train corridor. Construction speed, he said, had been scaled up from an initially estimated 2 km per month. He credited IITs, industry partners and railway engineers. He said comparable projects globally have averaged just 0.5 km per month.
That trajectory would mark a significant departure from the project’s troubled early years, when land disputes in Maharashtra, political resistance, and the Covid pandemic combined to push back timelines. The original target had been August 2022.