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Slum Development / Housing

Beware of tall promises, Mhada tells residents

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Hindustan Times  06.10.2010

Beware of tall promises, Mhada tells residents

Faced by a spate of complaints of builders making unreasonable offers to tenants of Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (Mhada) colonies to secure development rights, the housing body has decided to issue an advisory to tenants residing in such premises. This decision has been taken as builders, faced with cut-throat competition, have been promising large, spacious houses, modern amenities along with a handsome corpus funds, many of which were found to be unrealistic.

“We have found that many proposals do not make any sense at all and simply cannot be viable,” said Amarjit Singh Manhas, chairman, Mhada, (Mumbai).   “We will survey individual buildings, tell them of the status of the plot and the realistic area which they can expect in the redeveloped building,” Manhas said.

However, Manhas maintained, it would be purely an awareness exercise and that residents would have to take a final decision in all matters of redevelopment.    

Mhada, with its 56 colonies  around the city, has been a favoured redevelopment destination for most builders due to the well-planned layouts.

Mhada has been getting a lot of queries from residents about the redevelopment proposals they have been receiving from builders.

A well-known builder has been offering 1,012 square-foot flats to residents of Ram Krishna Melody Society. These residents are currently living in 440 square-foot houses.

Similarly, some buildings at Tagore Nagar in Vikhroli are getting offers of 1,200 square feet, which is almost four times the current 300 square feet they occupy.

Welcoming the decision, the Maharashtra Chambers of Housing Industry (MCHI) said some checks and balances were necessary.

“My company pulled out of the Tagore Nagar project as we realised that some builders were offering deals that were absolutely unreasonable and not viable at all,” said Sunil Mantri, president, MCHI, who also heads Sunil Mantri Realty Limited.

Mantri said non-viable projects only resulted in delaying the projects indefinitely and a spate of litigations, which defeats the revamp process ultimately.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 06 October 2010 11:37
 

Slum-mapping for RAY stressed

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The Hindu  06.10.2010

Slum-mapping for RAY stressed

Staff Reporter

VISAKHAPATNAM: The importance of slum-mapping using Geographic Information System (GIS) in implementing the Rajiv Awas Yojana housing programme for a slum-free city and accelerating the process of preparing detailed project reports was stressed at a workshop for Town Planning and Urban Community Development officials of the GVMC on Tuesday. A Town Planning specialist from Mission for Elimination of Poverty in Municipal Areas (MEPMA), Hyderabad, D. Ramesh Babu explained in detail the procedural aspects and methodology of slum-mapping in GIS mode. .

GVMC Additional Commissioner (Projects) K. Ramesh directed all the officials concerned to speed up the process of preparing DPRs in accordance with the norms laid down by the government. Chief City Planner D. Venkataratnam, deputy city planners Balaji and Ramakrishna Reddy and HRD Consultant A. Rajendra Krishna participated.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 06 October 2010 10:52
 

D.J. Halli slums drown in sewage water

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The Hindu  04.10.2010

D.J. Halli slums drown in sewage water

K.C. Deepika

In heavy rain drain overruns right into homes, forcing families to flee

There is no sanitary system in the area

As many as 20 houses have collapsed


— PHOTO: K. GOPINATHAN

THE AFTERMATH:Receding drain water has left a putrid debris, mostly comprising plastic, in D.J. Halli in Bangalore. Residents say their

BANGALORE: After that mother of all rain, which caused mayhem in the city last week, TV grabs of inundated roads and houses in certain areas were played in a loop for hours on end. However, the “other Bangalore” was left to tend to its injuries by itself.

In the latter category are the over 300 shacks lining the narrow streets of Devara Jeevanahalli (D.J. Halli) where the residents had to deal with the nightmare of having sewage water enter their homes. With no sanitary system in place, the clusters of homes in the slums near Modi Garden have become breeding grounds for diseases such as chikungunya and A (H1N1) over the years.

Unending misery

As usual, it is untold misery for those living in low-lying areas. As there is no storm-water drain in the vicinity, a heavy downpour channels malodorous sewage water from drains of surrounding areas right into homes, forcing families to find alternative accommodation for the day.

The day after is one of sheer drudgery, baling out stinking water and scrubbing homes of the fetid residue it leaves. This leads to another situation: stagnant pools of the baled out water on the road in front of their homes.

Sitting outside his home in Tipu Mohalla, Syed Khaleel watches children jump in and out of open drains trying to retrieve their toys. “Children get fever and other diseases often here. Mosquitoes and rats are commonly sighted. In the past three years, we have seen no development in this area,” says Mr. Khaleel, who has been living in the slum for 25 years. Not very far from here, Shakira of Roshan Mohalla says her four children fall ill regularly due to the befouled environment.

“When the situation goes out of hand, we the residents get to work and clean up as much as we can,” she says, pointing out the clogged drains. Drinking water too is a rare commodity as it comes out of taps contaminated with sewage water.

Houses collapse

The impact of the collapse of the sanitary system in the area has been so adverse that 20 houses built on the bed of what was once a tank (according to a local, the locality was called Tank Mohalla) collapsed as the sewage water weakened the structures.

While workers of the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) occasionally turn up to spray, residents want a permanent solution. Last week, D.J. Halli Councillor R. Sampat Raj came with BBMP engineers to draw up a plan for a storm-water drain to cover Modi Road, Doddananagar Layout and Dr. Ambedkar Medical College, for which Rs. 4 crore has been sanctioned.

“This slum has hardly seen any development. The BBMP installed streetlights only recently. The Karnataka Slum Clearance Board too has promised rehabilitation in a month or two,” the councillor said.

Last Updated on Monday, 04 October 2010 11:44
 


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