There was a project to replace the direct railway crossing
Tbilisi by a bypass connection north of
Tbilisi (
Tbilisi Railway Bypass Project). The Tbilisi central station would be closed but remain a shopping mall. It would not be served any longer by passenger trains, and the existing infrastructure would be dismantled. Instead of a central station the
Didube station in the north and the Navtlugi station in the south-east of
Tbilisi would become dead-end termini for passenger trains. Because of this a through connection for passenger trains and direct passenger transfers would no longer be possible. Instead of the expected reduction of environmental and traffic problems the axing would probably cause more traffic problems, because the public transport and underground transport system of the capital is optimized for the central station. Although argued otherwise by the American consulting firm
Booz Allen Hamilton, the project was therefore very much disputed by Western European transportation specialists and railway companies. Construction of the bypass railtrack was suspended in 2013, effectively ending the
Tbilisi Railway Bypass Project. According to plans revealed by the city government in 2018, the existing infrastructure for the bypass project will be integrated into a new line of Tbilisi Metro. ==See also==