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Public Health / Sanitation

HMDA to create food courts near IMAX

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The Hindu      02.08.2010

HMDA to create food courts near IMAX

Staff Reporter


The space has been proposed as suitable for food courts, party zone and small exhibitions

HMDA offers the space on ‘as is where is basis' and bidders have to refurbish and upgrade it


HYDERABAD: The Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA) is planning to create a facility to have food courts and indoor events at the covered space available next to the IMAX theatre along the most happening stretch of the city.

The total site which measures around 2,500 square metres besides the theatre complex has a built-up area of about 1,100 square meters that comes as a ground floor and mezzanine floors. Circular shaped, the building has a framed steel structure with aluminium sheeting sloped roof.

Developers invited

According to the officials, the space has been proposed as suitable for food courts, party zone and to conduct small exhibitions or events including indoor entertainment. Towards this, the HMDA has invited developers while offering the space on licence fee basis for a period of five years with a clause of ‘first right of refusal' for extension to the successful bidder.

The call has been made for bidders who have experience in that line and own, operate and maintain air-conditioned restaurant with 100 covers or two such restaurants with 50 covers each for last three years.

Also, those operating franchisee restaurants of repute with prescribed number of branches or those in catering business or event management with experience are called upon for the project.

The HMDA is offering the space ‘as is where is basis' with those bagging the project expected to refurbish and upgrade the facility as per the industry standards and also while using only biodegradable, temporary and eco-friendly material for the refurbishment.

Parking lot

The other aspects of the project include provision of at least 50 per cent space for parking and that liquor should not be allowed to be sold or consumed in the proposed facility.

Last Updated on Monday, 02 August 2010 04:35
 

With eye on civic polls, VMC puts Ratri Bazaar project on fast track

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Indian Express   29.07.2010

With eye on civic polls, VMC puts Ratri Bazaar project on fast track

Express News Service Tags : corporation, Ratri Bazaar project Posted: Thu Jul 29 2010, 03:09 hrs

Vadodara: Even though Barodians are struggling to get basic amenities like drinking water, sanitation and proper roads, the Vadodara Municipal Corporation (VMC) has decided to spend Rs 7.27 crore on the Ratri Bazaar project — a night food market.

The proposal for the same has been moved in the Standing Committee of the civic body, which is scheduled to meet on July 30.

VMC plans to develop the Ratri Bazaar on a piece of land near the VUDA circle, which the civic body had exchanged with M S University.

The ambitious plan has been chalked out by Mayor Balkrishna Shukla keeping an eye on the upcoming civic polls in Gujarat.

Sources said the project has been put on ‘fast track’ and senior officials have been asked not to waste time on the structural design and soil tests.

The civic body plans to develop the Rs 7.27-crore project in two phases. It has earmarked Rs 4.56 crore for the first phase and Rs 2.22 crores for the second phase.

In the first phase, we will develop the food stalls, kiosks, security cabin, administrative block, compound wall around the premises, flooring, observation tower, cemented roads and retaining wall. In the second phase, there will be an amphitheater, snacks bar, facility for the sale of art and craft materials, ice-cream parlour, and flooring with paver blocks,” said Municipal Commissioner M K Das.

An official said on condition of anonymity: “Some important formalities are being given a miss. The place where they are planning to develop the bazaar is actually a huge garbage dumping ground and soil test is important since the infrastructure will be used by the public. If something goes wrong the blame will come on the administrative wing and not the political wing. Besides, the rates which are quoted are certainly going to increase because several other aspects will have to be addressed once the project starts.”

Last Updated on Thursday, 29 July 2010 11:21
 

HC seeks action plan on Howrah dumping ground

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Indian Express   29.07.2010

 HC seeks action plan on Howrah dumping ground

Express News Service Tags : Howrah dumping ground case, kolkata Posted: Thu Jul 29 2010, 02:59 hrs

Kolkata:  The Calcutta High Court on Wednesday directed the Howrah Municipal Corporation (HMC) and West Bengal Pollution Control Board (WBPCB) to prepare action plans separately on the dumping ground at Belgachia which pollutes the river Ganga. Delivering the order, a Division Bench of Justices Pianki Chandra Ghosh and Asim Kumar Roy asked the HMC and WBPCB to prepare the action plans in two weeks according to the Municipal Solid Waste Management Rule 2000.

The Division Bench added that the preparation of the action plan should not be delayed as the case has been pending for a long time. Environmentalist Subash Dutta had filed a PIL in 2002, seeking the High Court’s intervention in the dumping ground at Belgachia, Howrah city.

On Wednesday Dutta pleaded that the High Court had asked the HMC to relocate the dumping ground through a 2003 order. But the HMC had failed to implement the court’s order in the last seven years, he contended.

Dutta noted that the total area of the dumping ground was a little more that 46 acres. But only about 13 acres of land was actually available now for dumping waste due to encroachments. At present, the dumping ground has become like a hill-top, with garbage floating in the open drains and contaminating the river Ganga, Dutta pointed out.

After the hearing, the Division Bench also directed the the HMC and the WBPCB to take assistance from external experts like Jadavpur University to prepare the action plan. The Division Bench observed that Ramkrishna Mission has already developed a mini-power generating plant from solid waste and that the HMC and the WBPCB might explore the idea. The HMC and WBPCB would have to prepare the action plan in two weeks and the case will come up for hearing after three weeks.

Last Updated on Thursday, 29 July 2010 11:02
 


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