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A fresh look at Mass Public Transport System for city

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The Hindu     04.09.2012

A fresh look at Mass Public Transport System for city

Karthik Madhavan

Monorail will occupy less space, can be completed comparatively early using pre-fabricated structures: RAAC

At a meeting recently, the Residents Awareness Association of Coimbatore (RAAC) asked the Coimbatore Corporation to take up with the State Government the need for a monorail for the city.

A presentation made on the occasion said that a city such as Coimbatore, with over a million population, could go in for the mass transport system project, more so when cities with far fewer population and lesser area had taken many steps forward.

Another reason the RAAC cited for having a monorail project for Coimbatore was a mention in this regard in the Governor’s address to the Tamil Nadu Assembly.

The demand and the Corporation’s inclination to have a fresh look at the mass transport project comes as the latest in the series of efforts the various Government and private agencies have been taking for a long to bring in a mass transport facility in the second biggest and most populated city of the State.

The first of the proposals that was discussed was that of mass rapid transit system, as in Chennai.The Corporation administration of 1996-2001 took up the proposal and dropped it once the experts said it was not feasible in Coimbatore. One of the reasons cited was poor patronage for a project of such capital intensive nature.

Next was the proposal for a metro rail system, as in New Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore. This proposal too had to be dropped because Coimbatore was a radial and not linear city. A circular rail was suggested, making use of the existing rail network around the city.

After a discussion with the Southern Railway officials, this too was given up.

Then came hope in the form of the Central Government-funded Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) scheme, which had a transport component.

The Coimbatore Corporation, under the scheme, with the help of a consultant prepared a mobility plan for the city. Therein it was suggested that Bus Rapid Transit System (BRTS) was best suited for the city.

The Corporation was to identify dedicated bus lanes on the arterial Avinashi, Tiruchi and Mettupalayam roads. This project too went the way the others went.

There could not have been a better, well-prepared study for the city, said S. Baskar of IC Centre for Governance. “The mobility study talked about every aspect of traffic and roads including platform width for pedestrians.”And the latest in the series of suggestions was the monorail.

At the RAAC presentation, it was said that monorail would occupy less space, could be completed comparatively early using pre-fabricated structures and a trip of the monorail with five carriages would take 10 buses off the road.

The presentation also said that having three lines – the East-West Corridor, Northern Loop and Southern Loop – would cost the Corporation around Rs. 3,500 crore. This estimate was based on the cost of monorail projects, under various stages of execution in other cities.

S.P. Palaniswamy, urban transport expert, said that the Corporation would take up the work at the earliest because every delay meant escalation in project cost.

Voicing the very opinion, Mr. Baskar said that cities such as Ahmedabad and Surat, which were also JNNURM beneficiary cities such as Coimbatore, had gone far ahead and completed many projects, making themselves eligible for second round of funding. Coimbatore, however, lagged far behind.

Highlighting the need for a mass transport system, the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam conducted mass campaigns in various parts of the city.

Whatever best the past, the RAAC proposal should serve as a new beginning and the Corporation should in right earnest take up the proposal, said R.R. Balasundaram, president, Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Coimbatore.

For, with the addition of 5,000 vehicles every year to the city’s roads, there was an urgent need for a mass transport system to propel the city to the next level of growth.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 04 September 2012 04:39
 

Corporation to increase parking space in Race Course

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The Times of India   31.08.2012

Corporation to increase parking space in Race Course

COIMBATORE: The city corporation and police department are formulating a joint action plan to ensure proper vehicle parking space in Race Course, one of the most sought after commercial and residential locality in the city. However, the move is expected to target the green cover of the locality in the long run as the plan being formulated is to reclaim the lawns and gardens developed in front of individual houses and commercial buildings and utilise it for vehicular parking after demarcating specific parking zones.

"Most houses have a small lawn or trees planted in front of the main entrance which technically occupies public space between the road margin and their property boundary. It belongs to the corporation and is public space," said TK Ponnusamy, Commissioner, Coimbatore Municipal Corporation.

Both the city police and corporation officials claimed that on an average there is about 20 feet of public space occupied by private parties. Most of it is around the 2.5 km circular walking track in the locality.

"There are several commercial establishments that have come up in Race Course and there is a need to ensure adequate parking space at the earliest," said AK Viswanathan, Commissioner, Coimbatore City Police.

The parking issue was discussed at a high level meeting of officials of Coimbatore Municipal corporation, City police, Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Limited (TANGEDCO), Tamil Nadu State Transport corporation and highways department at the Coimbatore corporation Main Office, late on Thursday evening. Apart from the parking issue, the eviction of roadside vendors occupying pedestrian space also came up during the meeting. City mayor SM Velusamy pointed out that illegal occupation of pedestrian footpaths will not be permitted and the civic body will soon start taking action against vendors.

The city traffic police are also planning to declare more parking zones in the city after discussing it with corporation officials. Parking zones will be identified after introducing traffic regulations on the main roads like Dr Nanjappa Road on a trial basis in the coming days. As many as 12 bus stops have also been identified which are to be relocated for better traffic management. The corporation has also asked TANGEDCO officials to submit a report on the electric poles in the middle of the road that are to be moved. As many as 13 such spots have been identified and handed over to the concerned officials who are expected to respond within the next 15 days.

Last Updated on Friday, 31 August 2012 05:56
 

Corporation speeds up work to begin mono rail project

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The Times of India   22.08.2012

Corporation speeds up work to begin mono rail project

COIMBATORE: Coimbatore is finally on its way to joining the league of growing urban metropolises in the country with its own urban mass transit, expected to be a monorail network in the city. The state government had announced that the monorail network will be introduced in the city soon after it came to power last year. The Union Urban development Ministry has already included Coimbatore as one of the tier two cities in eligible for mass public transport systems like metro rail.

With the growing number of vehicles on city roads, implementing a mass transport corridor has become essential."We should not waste any more time on the monorail project. The city is facing massive traffic congestion and an effective alternative mode of transport like monorail has to be introduced in the city. Apart from reducing the vehicular congestion, it will also help reduce pollution levels," said RR Balasundharam, President, Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Coimbatore.

City Mayor SM Velusamy and Corporation Commissioner TK Ponnusamy were subject to a presentation on the need for a mass public transport system in the city. A comparative study was also shown in which Coimbatore was compared with other tier II cities like Kochi which have already made headway in implementing proposals for Metro rail and Monorail respectively. The presentation was conducted based on the Kozhikode Monorail proposal which is to be inaugurated on September 15, 2012. It was prepared by Residents Awareness Association of Coimbatore (RAAC)."The presentation was an attempt to get the government to speed up the process without any further delay.

Such projects will take a long time to implement," said R Raveendran, Secretary, RAAC.Three separate monorail networks were suggested, two circular routes, in the northern and southern parts of the city and a dual linear line connecting the Eastern and Western parts. The northern route was designed from Gandhipuram via Ganapathy, Sivananda Colony, Saibaba Colony, Rs Puram, Town Hall, Railway Station and Gandhipuram. The southern route suggested was from Podanur via Trichy Road, Sungam, red Fields, Race Course, Railway Station, Ukkadam and finally looping through Podanur. A linear line was also proposed from Chinniampalayam, Airport, CODISSIA, PSG tech, Lakshmi Mill Junction, Gandhipuram, North Coimbatore, Cowley Brown Road and Tamil Nadu Agricultural University.

"We have to conduct a detailed study based on which the routes and other requirements for implementing the project were decided. We have to consider several aspects including infrastructure and land requirements," said TK Ponnusamy, Commissioner, Coimbatore Municipal Corporation.The city municipal corporation had earlier conducted a feasibility study to implement Bus Rapid Transport System through Wilbur Smith Associates a few years ago. They had proposed to implement the BRTS corridor starting from Avinashi Road and ending at Mettupalayam Road. The total extent of the corridor was to be about 17.6km out of which 6.87 km was to be an elevated pathway with three elevated bus stops and 14 bus stops on the ground level. But the project never materialised due to lack of space to accommodate the infrastructure requirements.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 22 August 2012 09:40
 


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