Pre-monsoon Pothole Drive Exposes Nagpur's Crumbling Internal Roads

Pre-monsoon Pothole Drive Exposes Nagpur's Crumbling Internal Roads
Nagpur: A citywide drive to repair potholes ahead of the monsoon has once again exposed the poor condition of Nagpur's internal tar roads, many of which now require complete renovation rather than routine patchwork.The Nagpur Municipal Corporation's (NMC) hot mix department conducted a special pre-monsoon repair drive between June 1 and June 6, filling 336 potholes covering 3,825.91 square metres of damaged road surface.The week-long exercise was carried out across all 10 civic zones. Two hot-mix teams were deployed to repair stretches damaged by age, wear and repeated utility works.According to data shared by the department, Laxmi Nagar recorded the highest number of potholes filled at 70, followed by Dharampeth (50), Nehru Nagar (46), Gandhibagh (43), Satranjipura (28), Mangalwari (28), Dhantoli (25), Hanuman Nagar (22), Lakadganj (13) and Ashi Nagar (11).In terms of area of repaired roads, Dharampeth topped the list with 693.15 sq m, followed by Gandhibagh (680.55 sq m), Nehru Nagar (509.10 sq m), Laxmi Nagar (363.40 sq m), Lakadganj (349.55 sq m), Mangalwari (334.65 sq m), Satranjipura (277.75 sq m), Ashi Nagar (234 sq m), Hanuman Nagar (206.30 sq m) and Dhantoli (177.46 sq m).While civic officials described the exercise as a preventive measure before heavy rainfall, the figures underscore the extent of deterioration in the city's road network.
The need to repair 336 potholes in just six days indicates that large sections of internal roads remain in distress despite regular maintenance.Several residential areas, including Ganpati Nagar, Pension Colony, Ramdaspeth, Sakkardara, Baba Farid Nagar, Jaripatka, Nara, Nari and Shanti Nagar, continue to experience recurring potholes, forcing the civic body to undertake repairs before every monsoon.Residents and public representatives have repeatedly argued that many tar roads have exceeded their design life and can no longer be sustained through temporary repairs.The problem is particularly acute on roads weakened by repeated excavation for water pipelines, sewer lines, utility cables, and other infrastructure projects. In many localities, stretches repaired during previous monsoons have once again developed cracks, depressions, and potholes, while others have been dug up afresh for utility works.Civic engineers maintain that hot-mix patching is only an interim measure intended to prevent accidents and ensure smoother traffic movement during the rainy season. However, road experts and residents contend that many stretches now require complete resurfacing or reconstruction for a lasting solution.With monsoon showers expected to intensify in the coming days, the latest repair drive may provide temporary relief. For thousands of commuters, however, the larger question remains whether Nagpur can move beyond annual pothole-filling exercises and undertake a comprehensive renewal of its ageing internal road network.PRE-MONSOON POTHOLE REPAIR DRIVE (JUNE 1–6)Potholes repaired: 336Total road area repaired: 3,825.91 sq mHighest potholes repaired: Laxmi Nagar (70)Highest repair area: Dharampeth (693.15 sq m)Hot-mix teams deployed: 2Zones covered: 10Duration: June 1–6, 2026

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About the AuthorProshun Chakraborty

Proshun Chakraborty is a seasoned journalist with over 25 years of experience in civic and urban affairs reporting. Currently Editor-Civic Affairs at The Times of India, Nagpur, he leads coverage on municipal governance, public infrastructure, traffic management, RTO affairs, and urban policy shifts. Proshun has built a trusted network across citizens, bureaucracy and political landscape. He is highly respected for his depth in civic journalism and unwavering commitment to public interest reporting. His hobbies include reading, listening to music and travelling.

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