Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Urban Transportation

Online mapping of MTC routes

Print PDF

The Hindu 13.09.2009

Online mapping of MTC routes

 

Ajai Sreevatsan

Students’ initiative to cover EMU network too

CHENNAI: A group of students have come together to map Chennai’s bus routes and make it available online, an initiative aimed at helping commuters, particularly those new to the city.

You no longer have to go to a bus stop to find out if there is a bus available from there to a particular destination. Just log on to the Internet and type a few characters to get all the information. The online project (http://busroutes.in/chennai/) which is completely open-source, provides a virtual public transport network of the city.

“There are plans to integrate the suburban train network and share autorickshaw routes,” says Arun Ganesh, a student at the National Institute of Design, who is coordinating the initiative.

“There is a need for a centralised database of public transport. Taking private vehicles off the road has been the aim for a long time. Owners of these vehicles are mostly the ones with access to the Internet. Provide them better information so that they can shift to a public mode of transport with ease,” he says.

A lot of data about public transportation system is available, but it is all personal. The idea behind the project is to ‘crowd source’ information from people who use the bus routes and make it easier to visualise and browse through all that data.

Rabin Vincent, who has worked on the site, says, “The Metropolitan Transport Corporation website has stage-wise route information, but it is inaccessible to search engines and not user-friendly. Information needs to be more easily available to search engines, and by extension, to the people looking for it.”

Solutions for issues that the community faces are best dealt through open collaboration, feel the students who were involved in the mapping project; which is why the OpenStreet mapping protocol was used.

Arun Ganesh admits that five to 10 per cent of routes have errors. “The primary data from the MTC has bus stops with names such as ‘tea kadai’ and ‘water tank.’ It is difficult to map these stops. But then, the code is entirely open-source. Anybody can take it and work on it.”

The way forward for the project, according to Yuvaraj Pandian, a second year engineering student, is to incorporate frequency data and multi-point routes which would give switching points from one bus to another. “But timing data would be reliable only if they are strictly followed,” he adds.

Last Updated on Sunday, 13 September 2009 06:53
 

New bus stand at Hosur to be opened in November

Print PDF

The Hindu 31.08.2009

New bus stand at Hosur to be opened in November

Staff Reporter

Photo: N. Bashkaran.

Inspection: Niranjan Mardi (right), Secretary, Municipal Administration and Water Supply, at the new bus stand under construction in Hosur on Sunday. Collector V.K Shanmugam (left), S. A. Sathya. Chairman, Hosur Municipality, are in the picture. —

KRISHNAGIRI: The construction work of the new bus stand at Hosur at a cost of Rs. 6.89 crore is in full swing and will be opened for public in November this year, Niranjan Mardi, Secretary, Municipal Administration and Water Supply, said here on Sunday.

Mr. Mardi, after visiting the site, said that the concrete structures of the ground and first floor have been finished with 28 shops in the ground floor and 48 shops in first floor with two hotels.

He also inspected the ongoing construction works of a modern gasifier crematorium at Chennathur village at a cost of Rs. 45 lakh and additional class room buildings at a cost of Rs. 50 lakh for the Panchayat Union School at Kamarajar Colony. Later, he visited the site for construction of new building for the Hosur Municipality.

Collector V.K. Shanmugam accompanied him. Municipality Chairman S.A. Sathya, Zonal Director, Municipal Administration, S.K. Anwar Basha, Revenue Divisional Officer P. Rathinavel, Commissioner A.P. Panneerselvam and Tahsildhar R. Muniraj were present during the inspection.

Last Updated on Monday, 31 August 2009 00:42
 

Traffic police urges MTC to revise running time of buses

Print PDF

The Times of India 27.08.2009

Traffic police urges MTC to revise running time of buses

CHENNAI: Seeking cooperation from the Metropolitan Transport Corportation (MTC) to minimise accidents involving buses, traffic police officials in the city have urged the corporation to revise the running time of buses to ensure that drivers do not resort to overspeeding or rash driving to complete trips in time.

While 75 persons lost their lives in accidents involving MTC buses till July this year (145 died in 2008), many traffic police officials say it is high time that the MTC management checks to see whether the running time allotted to its services is adequate and revise it, if necessary.

"Several times, when we inquire with MTC drivers who cause accidents, they say they had to rush because as they could not complete trips in time due to various reasons: increasing vehicle population, traffic congestion, large number of signals, a number of passengers getting in and out at every bus stop. It is for the MTC to ensure that drivers are given sufficient time to complete the stipulated number of trips,'' says a senior traffic police official in north Chennai.

Additional commissioner of police (traffic) Md Shakeel Akhter says he will write to MTC, asking it to be practical in fixing the running time for buses. "We cannot tell MTC what to do. It is only our suggestion, to ensure that the running time of services on all routes is sufficient,'' Akhter told The Times of India.

Many MTC drivers say they drive an average distance of 120 km to 150 km per shift. "The running time for most of the services has not been revised for more than a decade. When more than 800 new vehicles are added to the city roads everyday, with road space remaining the same, more traffic signals are coming up. Reaching the destination in time is not an easy task for us,'' says a driver in Broadway.

MTC officials say they have been revising the running time wherever necessary and that drivers are exaggerating the issue. "What the drivers say is not true. They blame the management only to shield their faults. In fact, most of the services arrive at the depot 10 to 15 minutes prior to the scheduled time. About 3,000 of our 8,000 drivers have an accident-free record. We have introduced over 2,000 new buses in the past two years; it has reduced driving difficulty in many ways. Reducing running time in many cases will bring down the number of trips, which will in turn affect passengers,'' says an MTC official.

 


Page 37 of 43