More than 100 people were reported missing after the incident Thursday, which occurred in a busy commercial area north of the city, said Sgt. Saurav Benerjee of Kolkata police.
However, authorities stressed that just because some have been reported missing doesn't mean they're trapped -- it just means they're unaccounted for.
The collapse occurred at around midday, which would have been a busy time in the area.
Since the collapse, 62 people have been pulled out of the rubble, according to Maj. Gen. Anurag Gupta with India's National Disaster Management Authority. It's not clear if those were among the 100-plus people unaccounted for mentioned by Benerjee.
The incident occurred in Girish Park, a crowded neighborhood with many wholesale markets.
Slabs from the flyover, which has been under construction for five years, fell on moving vehicles, Benerjee said.
Some people are feared trapped in their cars while construction workers may be buried under the debris.
Deadly construction accidents are tragically common in India and the rest of South Asia.
A building collapse in Pakistan killed 23 people in November, and nine died when a residential building fell in India in July of last year.
In neighboring Bangladesh, more than 1,000 people were killed when a poorly constructed garment factory caved in almost three years ago.
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