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Architect plans biggest gopuram

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Deccan Chronicle 11.09.2009

Architect plans biggest gopuram

September 11th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Thanjavur Sept. 10: If the dream of a 63-year-old teacher turned architect materialises, Mad-urai will have the biggest single stone gopuram of the world, four times larger than the Thanjavur Big Temple.

Mr A. Arasu, founder chairman of Consortium of Tamil Architects and an advocate, has identified a four-km long giant rock which is 1,200 metres broad and 300 metres high near the Yoganarasimha Perumal temple in Othakadai of Madurai for this.

“Geological study reveals that it is an old granite rock,” he says. “We can compare it with the length and breadth of Ajantha, Ellora cave and Bamiyan hills.”

Mr Arasu says that a grand architectural city can be built inside this mega rock. “We can create buildings bigger than the Parliament, sculpt places of worship for all religions and engrave 1,330 Tirukkural verses as base sculpture,” he adds.

The proposed granite gopuram would be 400 feet broad and 864 feet tall. The dream project can be completed in two years at a cost of Rs 400 crore.
According to Mr Arasu, this expense can be offset since authorities can get minerals, sand, gravel and granite slabs worth Rs 500 crore from the rock.
Mr Arasu has sent a copy of the project report to the Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, who in turn forwarded it to Tamil Nadu. A seven-member team has now been constituted to study the feasibility of the project.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 September 2009 03:41
 

UK consulate to help corporation fight global warming

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The Times of India 10.09.2009

UK consulate to help corporation fight global warming

CHENNAI: The British high commission is keen to help Chennai Corporation in preparing a road map in its fight against global warming, said British high commissioner to India, Richard Stagg. He was speaking to mediapersons at Ripon Buildings on Wednesday.

"In the wake of climatic change, Chennai, a coastal city, will face disastrous effects. And developed economies that have supplied the bulk of problems will have to give the bulk of solutions," Stagg said. The British high commission is funding the initiatives of ICLEI (International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives) - Local Governments for Sustainability, a consortium of local bodies, in identifying action plans to reduce energy consumption in municipal corporation services and its operations.

As a first step in that direction, ICLEI has identified 50 cities in the south Asia and 42 cities in India, which includes nine cities from south India (Chennai, Coimbatore, Trichy, Madurai, Guntur, Vizag, Vijaywada, Mysore, Bangalore), to adress climate change. ICLEI has completed a detailed energy and carbon emission inventory for all the participating cities and identified sectors where the respective municipal corporations can take the lead.

"It concerns issues of management of solid waste, of using energy more efficiently so that supply meets demand, and of managing water so that people's livelihoods are met," UK government first secretary (climate change), Fergus Auld said.

In June this year, cities in south India had come together to sign Mysore Call', which acknowledged the crucial role of cities and local governments in confronting the challenge of climate change.
 

City could face shortage of 8 lakh dwelling units by 2026

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The Times of India 07.09.2009

City could face shortage of 8 lakh dwelling units by 2026

CHENNAI: A year ago, in its second master plan, the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) had envisaged making the Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA) slum-free and housing for all by 2026.

The plan stipulated that in projects on more than one hectare (2.5 acres) 10% of the area, either in the same place or within a two km radius, be set apart for economically weaker section (EWS) and low income group (LIG) housing. It also gave 0.5 additional floor space index (FSI is the ratio of the land area to the built-up space) for EWS projects with a unit size of up to 45 sq metres (1 sq metre is 10.76 sq ft). The state government recently increased the FSI for EWS housing in the CMA by 50% and for middle income group housing by 30%. Few builders have promoted a EWS project.

CMDA member-secretary Vikram Kapur estimates that by 2026, Chennai could face a shortfall of eight lakh dwelling units. Most of the homeless would be the poor. The city now needs two lakh dwelling units to rehabilitate slum dwellers and it could cost a staggering Rs 100 billion, said Kapur. Obviously, the government does not have that kind of money.

And the poor don't have either. When agencies like the Tamil Nadu Housing Board and the Slum Clearance Board do not have the resources to provide such huge housing stock, the private sector has to be roped in. But which builder will do it as a corporate social commitment?

Kapur suggested that builders promoting EWS housing be given transferable development rights that they can use while developing premium apartments in posh areas. He also suggested that the stamp duty for EWS housing be reduced to Rs 100.

"Let the government unlock its land stock, create enough support infrastructure and give it to builders free of cost for promoting housing stock. In turn, we can earmark 10% space for EWS apartments and hand them over to the government for slum rehabilitation," said P Suresh, MD, Arun Excello.

Confederation of Real Estate Developers' Association of India, Tamil Nadu chapter secretary, T Chitty Babu, said: "We can provide affordable housing at Rs 5 lakh a unit provided the government creates a conducive eco-system. A person who buys my Rs 5 lakh apartment 50 km from the city should also be able to find a job there. He will not travel all the way to the city for working on a daily basis."
 


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