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Road Development

Civic body drafts 7,000 crore plan to resurface roads

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The Times of India          21.08.2013

Civic body drafts 7,000 crore plan to resurface roads

MUMBAI: Days after the Bombay high court took suo motu action against the BMC and other agencies for bad roads and accidents caused by potholes, the civic body has prepared a Rs 7,000-crore master plan to fix the problem. It will submit the plan to the HC by September 5.

The BMC has drafted a "preliminary micro-level master plan with a macro picture" for re-laying roads with a four-year vision- from 2013 to 2017.

Under the plan, roads will be divided into two categories-cement and asphalt-and will be given priority in terms of traffic density and those that are in bad shape. "We will give priority to roads that have not been re-laid for the last four years and are outside the defect liability period," said S V R Srinivas, additional civic commissioner. After a road is built or re-laid, it is under the DLP for a fixed period of time, and any damage to the road during this period is the contractor's responsibility, who has to undertake repairs for free.

The BMC will then re-lay major roads, such as Dr Ambedkar Road, Reay Road, Barrister Nath Pai Road in Kalachowkie and Acharya Dhonde Marg in Parel (E). It will then focus on arterial roads, such as Sai Baba Marg connecting Dr Ambedkar Road and Parel Tank Road.

"Design consultants will be appointed and all roads more than 60ft wide will be concretized," said Srinivas. "Experts opine that for every 5km road, 15%-20% should be resurfaced every year, as the lifeline of an asphalt road is only five years. As contractors do not maintain roads, we plan to include a maintenance clause in the tender."

The BMC will also be open to exploring new new technology like ultra thin white topping(UTWT) for roads with low traffic density, parking lots and also other material like polymer modified bitumen (PMB). Special teams comprising civic engineers will be formed to constantly monitor, audit and conduct quality checks along with BMC's vigilance department.

The HC had rapped the BMC over the pothole menace. Municipal commissioner Sitaram Kunte had claimed that 400-500km of roads are dug up by utilities, who do not fill up the trenches properly, thus creating potholes. Kunte had told the HC they were working towards utility mapping and coordinated the placement of underground utilities to ensure good roads.

 

BDA plans creation of unique street

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The Hindu               21.08.2013

BDA plans creation of unique street

Staff Reporter

The Bhubaneswar Development Authority (BDA) has mooted an idea of creating a widened street connecting Raj Mahal Square and AG Square in the city. If the avenue was created, visitors will be able to spend some time sitting alongside the road and enjoy the city beauty, said BDA Vice- Chairman Vishal Dev on the sidelines of a seminar here on Tuesday. Mr. Dev said the proposal, which was finalised, would be presented before the Chief Secretary and after the plan gets go-ahead signal, a detailed plan would be prepared. Moreover, fund requirement for the project would be estimated.

Asked about the feasibility of project, he said the only hindrance in the project was presence of multi-storeyed SBI office. “But in detailed planning, this aspect could be taken care of. Presence of government quarters is advantage for the plan. Quarters could be shifted to some other place,” he said. As per the present plan, the street would have benches along the road which would be further beautified by other street furniture. People could relish food from the roadside eateries and buy other souvenirs. Movement of vehicles could be restricted through the street.

 

BMC tops up road contracts to woo big firms

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The Indian Express                20.08.2013

BMC tops up road contracts to woo big firms

Mumbai

BMC is preparing a master plan to concretise major roads and lay asphalt on them. express Archive

To ensure big infrastructure companies evince interest in building roads, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) may tweak tender norms by not only doubling the ticket size of contracts but also loading the costs by including annual maintenance works.

According to BMC officials, the master plan to concretise major roads in the city and lay asphalt on them is under preparation. This will involve road tendering contracts worth Rs 7,000 crore over the next four years, they said. The size of each road contract is likely to be raised to Rs 300 crore from Rs 165 crore so far.

"At present, road contracts are allotted with a defect liability clause (DLP) clause, which includes just pothole-related repairs. However, to ensure better quality of roads, the contractors now need to maintain these roads, which includes resurfacing and re-laying of 15-20 per cent of the roads every year," said Additional Municipal Commissioner S V R Srinivas.

Besides less political interference and a single-window clearance system, the BMC will also ensure that continuous and big stretches of roads are allotted to a single contractor than the works being disbursed across wards.

"These companies usually have the experience of constructing highways or long stretches of roads and find it difficult to construct smaller patches of roads due to the smaller scale of work," said an official.

Despite tall claims, the civic administration has failed to rope in large firms to allot road contracts for three years in a row. As a result, same old contractors have bagged these contracts.

This year, however, the BMC hopes to attract large firms by including maintenance post-construction work in road contracts.

"These firms have expressed their concerns over the delay in carrying out storm water drain work, which affects the quality of roads. So we need to ensure BMC will conduct drain repair work along with road construction," said Srinivas.

Some corporators are, however, sceptical about the BMC's plans. "These big firms will construct only long and major patches of roads, but what about minor roads that account for a majority of the city's road network," said Raees Shaikh, Samajwadi Party corporator.

"The lacuna in the BMC's contracting system is lack of supervision and implementation. Present tender conditions that the contractor should own his own cement plant ensures that only six contractors who have been allotted road contracts for past 10 years remain eligible. One must change this rather than assuming that big companies can make a difference," said Shaikh.

The civic administration, which met representatives of reputed infrastructure companies such as Larsen & Toubro, Gammon India, Simplex Infrastructure, IRB and HCC, will soon begin the tender process to allot road contracts worth Rs 900 crore for the next year.

 


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