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Master Plan

New master plan for Kozhikode city

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The Hindu 09.04.2010

New master plan for Kozhikode city

Staff Reporter

Directive to follow government guidelines

 


Spatial Integration Committee constituted

Committee to help Town Planning Department


Kozhikode: The City Corporation Council has decided to prepare a new master plan for Kozhikode. A Spatial Integration Committee, with Mayor M. Bhaskaran as chairman, Corporation Secretary K. Vijayakumar as convener and Corporation Engineer K.P. Mathew as joint convener, has been constituted in this regard.

A meeting of the council, chaired by the Mayor here on Thursday, decided to include on the committee a councillor from each of the 17 working groups earlier formed for initiating development programmes under the People's Plan Campaign.

The decision to prepare a master plan was based on a State government directive seeking corporations to conform to its earlier guidelines. A development seminar would also be held for the purpose.

Deputy Mayor P.T. Abdul Latheef said that the committee would help the Town Planning Department in providing data in each ward of the city. The major responsibility of the councillors would be to facilitate the process of collecting secondary data, such as schools, hospitals and housing colonies located in their respective wards.

The Corporation had prepared a vision document in 2004. This had been submitted to the government long ago. So, the collection of data would not be a Herculean task, he said.

The new committee will provide additions to the earlier document. The Town Planning Department has been entrusted with the task of preparing the master plan, Prof. Latheef said.

Last Updated on Friday, 09 April 2010 05:37
 

Master plan to improve drainage

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The Hindu 23.03.2010

Master plan to improve drainage

Special Correspondent

HYDERABAD: A Rs. 6,245-crore master plan for improving the drainage and sewerage in areas under the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) will be sent to the Centre shortly.

Municipal Administration Minister Anam Ramnarayana Reddy informed G. Kishan Reddy ( BJP) and others in the Assembly on Monday that the master plan after approval by a State-level committee, headed by Chief Minister K. Rosaiah, would be submitted to the Centre seeking funds under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).

Some localities were getting inundated due to insufficient drain capacity and obstruction to free flow of water during heavy rains. He said 109 areas which faced such inundation were identified under the GHMC limits.

He said GHMC had taken steps for the pre-monsoon de-silting of drains/nalas and creation of additional inlet points for free flow of storm water.

As many as 401 of the 1,952 identified encroachments have been removed. A lot of difficulties were being faced in evicting encroachers, the Minister stated and sought the cooperation of MLAs in removing the remaining encroachments. The government would compensate and rehabilitate the affected people.

Mr. Reddy said to make Hyderabad one of the top cities, works worth Rs. 5,600 crore were sanctioned when Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy was the Chief Minister. Works worth Rs. 2,800 crore were already completed.

He agreed to convene shortly a meeting of the city legislators with officials of GHMC and Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 March 2010 07:15
 

Underground utilities out of GIS-based digital map

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Indian Express 22.03.201

Underground utilities out of GIS-based digital map

Shweta Desai Tags : government, digital map Posted: Monday , Mar 22, 2010 at 0109 hrs

Water
51 ruptures in 4 years, including 6 in last 2 weeks
Mumba: The city’s century-old water network will not be mapped, with the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) deciding to leave out underground utilities as it prepares to undertake a project for a GIS-based digital map of the city’s properties.

The absence of a complex underground utility network had often resulted in workers damaging pipelines while digging roads. The city has had 51 pipe ruptures in the last four years, six of them in the last two weeks, resulting in the wastage of millions of litres of water.

The BMC is in the process of preparing a GIS-based digital map for future development projects, marking each surface civic structure from a manhole to a building. But a high price quoted for the mapping of the city’s 40 lakh properties has resulted in the BMC dropping underground mapping.

“If we are to map over and underground amenities as earlier planned, the price will be not less than Rs 240 crore and we have a budget of only Rs 32 crore,” said a civic official. “We will conduct the underground survey of pipelines in later stages.”

Deputy municipal commissioner (water supply) Dineshchandra Gondaliya said although there is an old water pipeline map, it excludes newly developed areas. “Having the utilities mapped is important not just for the BMC but also for other agencies when we give permission for digging roads,” he said.

An area-wise map of underground utilities would have helped the BMC undertake excavation for development projects or carry out repair work without fear of damaging the mains.

Beneath the city’s 1900-km road network are old water lines laid during British rule, along with storm water drains and sewerage. In addition, there are cables of more than 20 outside agencies including cellular services and Mahanagar Gas, and almost all of these are unmapped or unmarked on the existing maps that haven’t been updated for ages. The MMRDA has been often forced to modify road and subway project plans because of utilities underground, leading to huge escalations in cost.

The BMC first proposed digital mapping of the city in 2007 but got only digital base maps from the National Informatics Centre (NIC), which has taken low lying aerial photographs.

Maps from the physical survey of the city will be superimposed on the base map to prepare an integrated holistic map. Every single property of the estimated 40 lakh will be mapped to implement the new capital value system to measure property tax. Officials said the task of physically visiting these properties to calculate the carpet area and details including number of storeys, open space, type (commercial or residential) will be strenuous. It will be even more difficult to conduct this exercise in slum areas, where residents have built two-storey structures and rented or sub-let these individually

Last Updated on Monday, 22 March 2010 11:34
 


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