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SMC Proposes Multi-level Parking

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The Times of India 25.09.2009

SMC Proposes Multi-level Parking

SURAT: Hours of traffic jams at Ring Road, near the textile hub of city, will soon be eased out as Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC) has mooted the biggest ever parking project.

Sources said SMC has proposed the multi-level parking facility at one of its reserved plots on Ring Road at an estimated cost of Rs 5 crore. The project has been planned exclusively for the textile hub.

"We have proposed the facility at one of the reserved plots at TP-8. This will solve most of traffic-related issues in market area," said additional city engineer V D Patel.

The Ring Road flyover bridge constructed by SMC to ease down traffic congestion on the main thoroughfare some few years ago was a futile exercise, at least on the 2 km-long stretch on Ring Road.

Snaking queues of vehicles in almost all lanes, by-lanes and on the main thoroughfare is a common sight throughout the day. The tempos laden with tonnes of grey fabric parked on the roadside, autorickshaws waiting for passengers and trucks making an unexpected appearance from small lanes add up to traffic woes amid little or no presence of traffic cops.

"If we have to reach the market by 10 am, we have to start two hours ahead from our residence. We are passing through gruelling experiences everyday. Now, traffic congestion has become a part and parcel of our business lives," says general secretary, Federation of Surat Textile Traders Association (FOSTTA), Devkishan Manghani.

According to Manghani, merchants from other states and abroad have a very bad impression about traffic woes in Surat, especially on Ring Road. Most merchants visiting the city insist on holding business meetings in hotels located in posh areas like Athwalines and Parle Point.

Manghani said, "The proposed facility is likely to solve traffic problems."

 

South Chennai flyovers to be opened next month

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Deccan Chronicle 25.09.2009

South Chennai flyovers to be opened next month

September 25th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Chennai
Sept. 24: Two flyovers in south Chennai – at Turnbulls road and in Alandur – are nearing completion and would be inaugurated next month, said deputy chief minister M.K. Stalin on Thursday after inspecting the work on the former at Nandanam. The chief minister will be inaugurating the much-awaited flyover on the busy Turnbulls Road-Cenatoph road stretch.

Stalin who inspected the progress of the Rs 19 crore project on Tunrbulls road said that the 458-metre flyover is being constructed to a height of nearly six metres from the ground and is mounted on 12 pillars erected for the purpose.

Mr Stalin who also enquired about the litigation filed against the construction of the bridge said about Rs 10 crore was spent for the purpose of land acquisition. He added that the government had accorded permission for the construction of a flyover at a cost of Rs 61 crore at Vyasarapadi in north Chennai.

Opposition floor leader Saidai Ravi briefed Mr Stalin on the encroachments that were to be removed near the flyover to ensure free flow of traffic. Mayor M. Subramanian, corporation commissioner Rajesh Lakhoni, joint commissioner (works) Ashish Chatterjee and works committee chairman Suresh Kumar accompanied Mr Stalin during his visit.

The subway at Saidapet railway level crossing and a bridge across the Adyar River connecting Saidapet with Guindy Industrial Estate would also be ready by the end of October, Mr Stalin said.

 

City to be ‘drained’ of sewage

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The Deccan Chronicle 24.09.2009

City to be ‘drained’ of sewage

September 24th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Bengaluru, Sept. 23: The city administration is leaving no stone unturned to ensure that the mega Rs 450 crore project to make stormwater drains in the city sewage-free is completed without a hitch. Those who connect their sewage lines to stormwater drains will be served a notice from Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) and Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) and the water supply might even get disconnected, says Katta Subramanya Naidu, BWSSB minister.

A private agency has been entrusted the task of surveying the stormwater and sewage drains in the city. After the report is submitted, an integrated plan to make all the stormwater drains in the city free of sewage will be prepared.

“Encroachments will also be demolished. We will acquire 15 feet of land on either side of the stormwater drain and create feeder and lateral lines for the sewage lines,” said Mr Naidu.

Tenders have been invited for a project worth Rs 900 crore to set up ground water recharge structures and sewage treatment plants three kilometre apart along open stormwater drains. The treated water will be supplied to tanks for secondary use, Mr Naidu added. A team of officials will visit Mumbai on Sunday to study sewage treatment plants there before implementing the plan in the city, he said.

Another Rs 40 crore pilot project to make zero sewage stormwater drains a reality has already been approved by BWSSB and will be taken up in Hebbal.

 


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