The freeway was built in three segments – a 9.3 km elevated road from Orange Gate on
P D'Mello Road to the beginning of Anik-Panjarpol Link Road, a 5 km mostly at grade road featuring twin tunnels from Anik to the beginning of Panjarpol-Ghatkopar Link Road, and a 2.5 km flyover from Panjarpol to Ghatkopar. The 4-lane Eastern Freeway, starts at P D'Mello Road near Wadi Bandar, and further enters into
Mumbai Port Trust road and eventually joins the EEH via Anik Panjarpol Link Road (APLR), near
Wadala.
P D'Mello Road to Anik The first section has a length of 9.3 km, width of 17.2 meters and connects
P D'Mello Road to Anik. This phase also includes ground improvement of existing roads, the construction of a 4-lane elevated corridor and the construction of a missing link. This stretch is made up of 4 sections, and has 5 ramps for exit and entry at Reay Road, Port Road, Anik and Orange Gate. • Section I – From S V Patel road junction on P D'Mello road to Orange Gate consisting of up and down ramps (0.41 km) • Section II – Orange gate to Mumbai Port Trust pipeline gate – elevated corridor (7.02 km) • Section III – Mumbai Port Trust pipe line gate to WTT road consisting of construction of elevated corridor through salt pan (Missing Link) and customs area (0.78 km) • Section IV – WTT road near customs area to start of APLR – elevated corridor (1.08 km) Civil construction work on this section was completed on 9 March 2013. The 9.29 km stretch from Orange Gate to Mahul Creek is the longest flyover in Mumbai and third longest flyover in India, after the 25 km Kanpur city bypass flyover on NH-2 and the 11.6 km
P. V. Narasimha Rao Elevated Expressway in
Hyderabad. This segment was opened to the public on 14 June 2013, along with four lanes of the Anik – Panjarpol link road.
Anik – Panjarpol link road The second segment is the 8-lane, 5 km long Anik – Panjarpol link road. The twin tunnels are 505m (North-bound) and 555m (South-bound) in length;
Panjarpol – Ghatkopar link road The third segment consists of a 4-lane elevated 2.8 km flyover from Panjarpol till the
Ghatkopar-Mankhurd Link Road (GMLR), via
Govandi. This stretch has 3 ramps near Deonar, Govandi and Panjarpol. Like the elevated section of the freeway, the Panjarpol-Ghatkopar Link Road has a bitumen layer atop the concrete, ensuring smoother riding quality than a regular cement road. Construction work on this phase of the project was awarded in August 2009 at a cost of , and MMRDA officials announced February 2011 as the deadline. However, obtaining permissions from authorities concerned, rehabilitating project affected families and engineering challenges involved during the construction stage, delayed the project. All civil work on the final stretch of the Eastern Freeway, from Panjarpol to Ghatkopar-Mankhurd Link Road (GMLR), was completed in January 2014. Engineers working on the project then concretised the surface of the Panjarpol-Ghatkopar Link Road, which begins at Panjarpol junction near R K Studio in Chembur and ends at the GMLR. When the first phase of the freeway was inaugurated in June 2013, the MMRDA had planned to commission the final stretch in December 2013. By the end of April 2014, the MMRDA was finishing up the painting and concretising and installing streetlights and signs. The final leg of the 2.8 km Panjarpol-Ghatkopar link road was opened to traffic on 16 June 2014, marking the commissioning of the entire Eastern Freeway.
Other work Seismic arresters installed on the freeway will enable it to handle earthquakes of up to 7.5 on the
Richter scale. ==Future plans==