The fatal incident took place at Patan village in Maval taluka, near Lohagad Fort, where a house was buried under debris in the early hours. Rescue teams recovered one body from the site, while operations continued to trace two other members of the same family. Police said three landslides were reported in the remote village after sustained heavy rainfall loosened slopes in the area.
The weather disruption quickly widened into a major transport emergency. Traffic on the Pune-Mumbai Expressway and the old Pune-Mumbai Highway was suspended after landslides, flooding and structural damage made movement unsafe. Authorities advised motorists to avoid travel between the two cities and follow official traffic updates, as waterlogging and debris blocked several stretches in and around Lonavala, Khandala and Maval.
The most serious road disruption was reported on the Pune-to-Mumbai carriageway of the Khopoli-Kusgaon Missing Link, where a landslide occurred near the exit of a tunnel. Traffic had to be diverted from about 4am as a precaution. Officials said parts of the retaining structure were affected, while separate reports of a concrete pillar falling on the carriageway added to safety concerns. The Missing Link, opened two months ago, is a 13-km route through the Sahyadri range designed to cut travel distance by about 6 km and reduce travel time by 25 to 30 minutes.
By early afternoon, movement on one side of the Missing Link had begun to resume, but diversions continued on the Pune-to-Mumbai side. Traffic on the old highway was being restored in phases, though police warned that water accumulation, damaged power lines and fallen trees could slow full reopening. Several motorists reported being stuck near Lonavala since early morning, with bumper-to-bumper queues forming after vehicles were shifted away from the closed stretch.
Rail services on the Mumbai-Pune route were also hit after landslides deposited mud and debris on tracks in the Bhor Ghat section between Karjat and Lonavala. Sixteen trains were cancelled, while several others were diverted, short-terminated or short-originated. Railway teams began clearing operations near Thakurwadi and Monkey Hill Loop Cabin, with safety inspections required before regular movement could resume on affected tracks.
The disruption came after Lonavala recorded exceptionally heavy rainfall, with estimates ranging from more than 600 mm to 670 mm over 24 hours. The heavy downpour swelled streams, flooded low-lying areas and left slopes in the ghat section vulnerable to further slips. Officials said flood-like conditions were also reported in parts of Maval and Tamhini Ghat, restricting the use of alternate routes between Pune and Mumbai.
The Pune district administration declared a holiday for all schools and anganwadis on Monday after a red alert for extremely heavy rain. Residents were asked to avoid unnecessary travel, stay away from waterfalls, rivers and hill slopes, and not venture into flooded stretches. Disaster response teams, police and local volunteers were deployed across vulnerable points, with the National Disaster Response Force engaged in search and rescue work at Patan village.
The wider rain spell has placed Maharashtra’s disaster management system under pressure. Mumbai, Palghar, Raigad and the ghat areas of Pune district received heavy to extremely heavy rainfall, causing tree falls, local flooding and transport breakdowns. Mumbai’s civic authorities advised work-from-home arrangements where possible, while schools and colleges in several districts were shut as a precaution.
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