From the ‘Fourth City’ to a ₹70,000 Crore Road Revolution—How Telangana is Redefining Connectivity by 2028.
The “City of Pearls” is about to become the “City of Speed.”
On Monday, Telangana’s Roads and Buildings Minister, Komatireddy Venkat Reddy, dropped a bombshell in the Assembly that has urban planners and commuters buzzing: the state is officially earmarking 500 acres of land near Shamshabad to host a massive hub for India’s proposed bullet train network.
But this isn’t just about a single station; it’s the cornerstone of a total infrastructure overhaul. Here is the breakdown of what Hyderabad’s “Future City” is actually going to look like.
1. The Shamshabad Junction: A Tri-City Link
The 500-acre site isn’t just a random plot; it’s strategically placed within the Future City (the state’s ambitious ‘Fourth City’ project). This hub will serve as the central nervous system for three major high-speed rail corridors announced in the Union Budget 2026-27:
- Hyderabad to Bengaluru: A mere 2-hour dash.
- Hyderabad to Mumbai (via Pune): Under 3.5 hours.
- Hyderabad to Chennai: Connecting the coasts in less than 3 hours.
Imagine landing at Rajiv Gandhi International Airport and being in the heart of Bengaluru or Chennai before your next conference call. That’s the “Future City” promise.
2. The ₹70,000 Crore “Model Road” Mission
The Minister didn’t stop at trains. He outlined a staggering ₹70,000 crore investment plan over the next three years. The goal? To transform every major thoroughfare in Telangana into a “Model Road” by December 2028.
Key projects currently on the fast track include:
- The Greenfield Highway: A high-speed link connecting Future City to Amaravati and the Bandar Port.
- Six-Laning NH-65: The Hyderabad–Vijayawada highway is getting a massive expansion to ease the bottleneck between the two states.
- Srisailam Elevated Corridor: A 53-km engineering marvel between Mannanur and Srisailam to ensure smooth travel while protecting our forest ecosystems.
3. Why This Matters Now
With the Mumbai–Ahmedabad bullet train already showing progress and new freight corridors opening up across India, the Centre’s push for sustainable, high-speed travel is finally hitting home in South India.
For Hyderabadis, this means more than just shorter travel times. It means a surge in real estate near Shamshabad, thousands of new tech and logistics jobs, and a city that finally outpaces its own growth.










