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Road Development

GMADA allots Mullanpur urban estate road construction work

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Indian Express   28.09.2010

GMADA allots Mullanpur urban estate road construction work

Express News Service Tags : Greater Mohali Area Development Authority, Mullanpur urban estate Posted: Tue Sep 28 2010, 03:13 hrs

Mohali:  After beginning the allotment of plots in its first independent integrated township Aerocity, the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA) has also begun work on its second proposed Mullanpur urban estate with the allotment of work to construct the road leading to the project.

The 8-km-long and 200-ft-wide road will take off from the Chandigarh-Mullanpur boundary and go up to the Kurali-Siswan T-junction. Three high-level bridges and culverts will also be built on the road. This work was awarded to leading private company Omaxe Infrastructure and Construction Limited (OICL) for Rs 704 million and is scheduled to be be completed within 16 months.

Disclosing this here today, Omaxe Group CMD Rohtas Goel said, “This is our first venture in highway construction and we are determined to provide superior quality development and maintain consistency in our work. We are committed to the government’s vision of developing world-class infrastructure and this project will be a model for future projects.”

The Omaxe group had recently bagged orders from the DGMAP (Director General Married Accommodation Project), Ministry of Defence, to construct residential complex at Nagrotra, Jammu and Kashmir, and Indore, MP. It had also received contracts from the Air Force Naval Housing Board (AFNHB) to construct a housing colony at Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, Manyavar Kanshiram Allopathic Medical College and its Associated Hospital at Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, and Modern Jail at Faridkot and Kapurthala, Punjab.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 September 2010 11:33
 

Roads in city in a bad shape

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The Hindu  28.09.2010

Roads in city in a bad shape

Staff Reporter


OBSTACLE COURSE: Gaping potholes dot the Kaniampuzha Road in Vytilla. The proposed bus terminal at Vytilla is expected to come on the road's southern side.—

KOCHI: People tend to travel less in the rainy season, but not in Kochi. They travel more, thanks to potholed arterial and side roads that force them to circumnavigate through roads that are in relatively-better condition. Though roads get potholed every monsoon, seldom have they become as unmotorable as now.

Even roads passing through residential colonies have not been repaired, despite residents' associations and their apex councils taking up the issue with the Corporation of Kochi and the PWD.

KTM affected

This time, the PWD's ineptitude in repairing the High Court-Goshree bridges road resulted in thousands of people, including foreign delegates attending the Kerala Travel Mart in the Bolghatty Palace Hotel being forced to travel through the back-breaking stretch that is also used by lakhs of islanders. The issue even featured in many formal interactions at the event, with a delegate wondering why agencies blame the rains for delay in repairing roads in the State.

“Why can't they reinforce roads during the dry spell from October to March so that they can withstand the rains,” asked one of them. The organizers blamed the PWD for not heeding their repeated requests to repair the road leading to the mart's venue.

Government agencies have been blaming the slushy soil in Kochi for roads getting damaged even in a minor downpour. But they ran out of excuses when asked about the South overbridge maintained by the Corporation, the Menaka Bridge and the bridge at Chembumukku on the Civil Line Road - both owned by the PWD, developed huge potholes in the rain.

The Kaniampuzha Road at Vytilla that passes beside the proposed bus terminal cum mobility hub in Vytilla is in an unmotorable condition for over two months.

Thus, many people are forced to circumnavigate through Eroor and Vennala to reach areas north of the NH bypass.

Similarly, commuters who fear getting caught in traffic snarls near the South overbridge prefer to travel a few kilometers extra and reach MG Road through the Kadavanthra-Kaloor Road and the North overbridge.

Resurfacing needed

A PWD engineer said that all Corporation of Kochi-maintained roads must be upgraded and resurfaced using bituminous macadam and bituminous concrete, instead of the 20-mm and 40-mm chipping concrete surfacing being done now.

“Only then will contractors with modern equipments bid for the works. All arterial and major side roads in the city and their drains can be upgraded in a phased manner, so that people need not endure a nightmarish ride during the monsoons. This would also reduce traffic snarls,” the official said.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 September 2010 11:23
 

‘Not too much cash but roads will get attention they need’

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Indian Express   27.09.2010

‘Not too much cash but roads will get attention they need’

sharvaripatwa Tags : Aseem Gupta, BMC Posted: Mon Sep 27 2010, 01:44 hrs

Mumbai:  Four months after taking charge, Additional Municipal Commissioner Aseem Gupta speaks about the core issues that need to be tackled, and the need to continue development amid a cash crunch in the BMC.

With lack of funds currently, will concreting of roads take a back seat?

We have discussed various possibilities with the finance department and we will now do a smaller part of the work targeted earlier. We are definitely not getting Rs 1,200 crore for 150 km of roads, the earlier target of the roads department. But we have managed to get a substantial sum sanctioned. I am happy with the current allocation. We will do less than 100 km of concretisation this year but it will be at least 50 per cent of the earlier target.

Will the BMC persist with the Carboncor technology for roads though it has failed earlier?

Surprisingly, after the standing technical advisory committee on roads gave the nod to Carboncor technology, the company has not yet come forward to show their product. We have written to the company saying they can come with their proposals. However, one needs to also see that work is executed well to succeed. From what I have been hearing, it seems at the time the technology was adopted, for some reason, not many were well-versed in using it. But we are still open to the technology as per STAC recommendations and are also considering 2-3 other technologies. But we have made it mandatory that whoever comes forth with new technologies for pothole repair needs to first show us how these will work.

Will contractors who have done shoddy work be blacklisted? Will they get contracts in future?

Though we have identified some contractors and blacklisted them, it should be understood this process takes a long time. We should work towards speeding it up so that such contractors can be brought to book faster. Also, from now whether or not a road falls under the defect liability period (DLP), the BMC will investigate road patches gone bad. Wherever the road base is not as per design we will take action against those contractors. Usually it is only roads under the DLP for which contractors can be hauled, but now the administration will carry out technical investigations and if road bases are found substandard then the contractors can be pulled up.

Is it true that since pothole repairs are handled at ward level, accountability is often compromised?

A system needs to be devised where ward-level audits are possible. Unlike last year, contractors have been appointed wardwise for road maintenance. Inconsistent or shoddy work can be punished by local level audits. We will also devise a system where head office will check the pothole filling work done at ward level too.

Now that a new caretaker policy is being framed for maintenance of shrinking open spaces, how do you ensure that this time it is not misused by private parties?

For the BMC, both money and manageability are a problem currently, in case of caretaker policy for open spaces. But in the new caretaker policy we have ensured full transparency and most importantly the citizen does not in any way lose access to these spaces. Whatever drawbacks the earlier caretaker policy had, we have made sure this time the policy is foolproof.

Last Updated on Monday, 27 September 2010 11:06
 


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