The corridor passes through the hilly areas of Uttarakhand. Some portions are near the bank of Ganges with a stretch of 79 km which connects Laksar Junction situates on Moradabad–Ambala line and Dehradun. It has a branch line which starts from Raiwala Junction and ends at Rishikesh with a stretch of 12 km.
Speed Limit
Laksar-Dehradun line is classified as a "Group D" line and can take speeds up to 100 km/h. and Raiwala-Rishikesh branch line is classified as a "Group D" line and can take speeds up to 100 km/h but Haridwar to Dehradun is PSR caution of 50 kmph so the train is not take max speed.
The first phase, from Laksar Junction to Jwalapur was opened on 1 January 1886.
The second phase, from Jwalapur to Haridwar was opened on 20 August 1886.
The third phase, from Haridwar to Dehradun was sanctioned on 18 November 1896[1] and opened on 1 March 1900.[2]
Whereas, the branch line between Raiwala Junction and Rishikesh which were comes under the East Indian Railway Garhwal district portion was opened on 2 April 1927.[3] And the extension of the line to Karnaprayag by Rishikesh–Karnaprayag line, the Yog Nagari Rishikesh railway station was inaugurated on 12 January 2021.[4]
Electrification
The electrification was done on dividing the three sections of this route, the first section is Laksar Junction–Haridwar,[5] the second section is Haridwar–Dehradun[6] and the third section is Raiwala–Rishikesh branch. The First section is electrified on 28 September 2015.[7] The second section is electrified on 20 October 2016.[8][9] And the third section was opened on 2018.[10]