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Delhi limps behind in walkability index

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The Times of India 26.09.2009

Delhi limps behind in walkability index

NEW DELHI: If you are among those Delhiites who rely on walking to complete most of your chores, you deserve more than a pat. For, you do so in a
pedestrian-unfriendly city, which does not rate walking anywhere near transport although 32% of its citizens mostly get about on foot.

A look at Delhi's congested footpaths and crumbling sidewalks is proof enough of the pedestrian nightmare but now a Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) report has pointed to how deficient the city is in terms of ``walkability''. Despite its densely packed population, Mumbai seems more walker-friendly with as much as 55% of its population walking regularly.

Despite the large number of urban ``walkers'', WWF's Alternative Urban Futures Report, to be released at the First Habitat Summit in the city on Saturday, reveals the absence of any emphasis on pedestrians, street culture and walkways as far as urban planning goes. Gurgaon, for instance, is indicated as almost totally lacking sidewalks -- a fact readily evident to its residents.

The allocation of funds in Delhi tells the story. Despite budgets almost doubling between 2002-07, 80% of the money spent on transport has gone into widening roads, sometimes at the cost of sidewalks. Hardly any has been spent on pedestrian facilities. This, the report points out, is in sharp contrast with cities like London where the footpaths on Oxford Street are as wide as the road itself.

Even though suburban trains carry thousands of Mumbai commuters to work, the sight of people pouring out of stations onto connecting bridges and walkways is common enough. Mumbai is followed by Ahmedabad where 40% of the people walk to get around, followed by Bangalore at 10% and Kolkata 11%.

The study of 30 Indian cities shows that on an average, almost 40% of all trips in urban India still do not involve motorized vehicles - 28% walked and 11% cycled. The proportion rose sharply in smaller towns since distances were usually small and roads less congested. However, in bigger cities, the proportion of people using conventional public transport was high, and consequently commuters walked the last mile.

For instance, in cities with more than eight million population, 22% walked all the way, 8% used cycles and 44% public transport. This adds up to 74% people who rely on non-motorised transport for at least part of their commute, the study adds.

The study elaborates walkability as requiring ``a whole gamut of urban design requirements like density, mixed use, street life, pedestrian crossings, tree shade, public spaces'' etc.

Sanjeev Sanyal, founder of the Sustainable Planet Institute, said: ``It is a myth that it is too hot to walk in a city like Delhi. Singapore has hot and humid temperature almost throughout the year but people still walk there. The problem is walking and cycling are not being included as a legitimate form of transport.''

Referring to the proposal to cover drains, Delhi chief secretary Rakesh Mehta said, ``We started the Delhi Greens project but due to multiplicity of authority - the drains fell under MCD or NDMC and the areas around it under DDA, PWD or MCD.'”

Experts feel the need for proper demarcation of utilities. ``Delhi lacks a clear road hierarchy in terms of expressways, arterial roads and community roads. This makes it tough to build a network of footpaths as different roads have different pedestrian needs,'' said OP Agarwal, CEO, Urban Mass Transit Company.

Added Gaurav Gupta, director, The Climate Project, India: ``Private vehicles in India account for 67.5% of motorised vehicles, carry 37% of the commuters and take up 67% of the road width. Buses account for 24.5% of motorised vehicles on the road and carry around 61% commuters, taking up 38% road width. Cities are emerging like in blots on the bio-diversity landscape and we need to prevent this before the situation worsens.''

Now, Centre to launch national mission on sustainable habitat

The UPA government is all set to launch a National Mission on Sustainable Habitat, aiming to improve energy efficiency in buildings and better management of solid waste besides facilitating shift to public transport.

The Mission, expected to be cleared by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh soon, suggests framing “sustainable habitat standards” to increase energy efficiency in residential and commercial sector, urban transport, water supply and sewage, urban planning and municipal waste. An official said the standards would be finalised within three months of the Mission’s launch.

To ensure that future developments address climate change concerns, these standards will be integrated with building bylaws, development control norms and motor vehicle laws, an official said. The mission is being worked out by the urban development ministry.
 

A town reborn, in the shadow of Pune

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Hindustan Times 25.09.2009

A town reborn, in the shadow of Pune

Hariharan Gurumurty (31), who works in a bank and lives in Kandivli, thinks roads in Pimpri-Chinchwad are far better than ones in Mumbai.

“The Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation knows how to make quality roads,” says Gurumurty, who regularly visits his mother in Khadki, on the western fringes of Pune. “After the old Pune-Bombay road was widened and redone, a 45-minute drive has been reduced to a 15-minute zip.”

Pimpri-Chinchwad — a small industrial town adjacent to Pune — was what lay along the road to Mumbai. It was always what you passed, never where you stopped.

But the town is now playing catch-up with its neighbour, with roads that will put Pune’s best to shame and affordable residential areas that are drawing young professionals away from Pune’s posh neighbourhoods.

“We were always a resource-rich civic body. We have just rescheduled our priorities,” says Ashish Sharma, the town’s municipal commissioner of 15 months. “We have been growing in the shadow of Pune for so long and we think it is time we claimed our space as a vibrant, independent town in its own right.”

The efforts of the civic body here are not just making people sit up and take notice but, at a far more fundamental level, are offering an affordable and accessible living space to innumerable people who could otherwise be squeezed out by the realty rates and congestion of Pune.

Lending a hand — a large one at that — in pulling Pimpri-Chinchwad out of the shadows are several projects under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, which are jointly funded by the Central and state governments. The projects — worth Rs 2,601 crore — include work on sewerage systems, water supply systems, stormwater drains, solid waste management, slum rehabilitation and bus rapid transport systems (BRTS).

About Rs 738 crore has been sanctioned for the BRTS, which includes the widening of four arterial roads. The projects will get 50 per cent of its funds from the Centre, 20 per cent from the state government and the rest from the local civic body.

Apart from the 12.5-km stretch of the Pune-Bombay Road, three more roads — all connecting pockets of frenzied residential and commercial development around Pune and Pimpri-Chinchwad — are being redone to accommodate the ever-increasing traffic. Flyovers and underpasses are being added, foot overbridges placed and trees transplanted.

The Aundh-Ravet road is one on which work has begun. A drive along the 14.5-km stretch connecting Aundh — Pune’s posh and congested western suburb — to Ravet shows work in progress.

‘Experience the best of estate living,’ screams a hoarding with the advertisement for a residential project in Pimple-Gurav. This road, till recently, simply connected Pune to NH4. But now it is bustling with traffic between thriving suburbs like Pimple-Gurav, Pimple Saudagar, Nigdi and Akurdi and the heart of Pune.

Living in one of these many residential pockets and working in Pune is now far more affordable and comfortable than it ever was before.

“Houses this side of town are cheaper than those in Pune and people can now think of travelling for five more minutes,” says Kapil Arora, a 32-year-old graphic designer. Arora’s daily commute from his home in Pimple-Saudagar — a neighbourhood that is developing faster than he remembers in the last 25 years — to his office in Pune is a breeze.

Monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment, for instance, in Pune’s eastern suburb of Wadgaon Sheri is Rs 12,500 whereas in Pimple-Saudagar — five extra kilometres away — it is Rs 9,000.

For someone who has seen Pune struggle with the plight of its roads and infrastructure over the last 10 years, the silent and fast development of Pimpri-Chinchwad is nothing short of bewildering. And it is not eight-lane highways that are changing lives, but well-made strategic roads that help the common man get home from work on time for dinner.

Last Updated on Friday, 25 September 2009 12:30
 

VMC, GAIL to join hands soon

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Indian Express 25.09.2009

VMC, GAIL to join hands soon

The Vadodara Municipal Corporation (VMC) has started preparing a project for the distribution network to supply piped natural gas in the city following a nod from the state government to form a Joint Venture Company between the Corporation and Gas Authority of India Limited (GAIL).

In 1972, VMC had become the first local body in the country to supply piped gas to people. It is still the only local body to do so, that too on no profit no loss basis.

Senior officials at VMC's Gas Project department told Newsline that the Corporation has a broader plan of pipeline network. Once the JV is formed, the plan will be tabled for discussion with GAIL to make changes. Officials said the records of area-wise consumption, demand from other areas, bill collection patterns and incidents of thefts will be used to make future plans.

“We have already prepared a Detailed Project Report, which we were supposed to submit to the higher authorities when we proposed for the JV. The report will come in handy once we move ahead with the formation of the company. It will, however, not be the only document to decide the future plan of action, because we will also have inputs from GAIL for the distribution network," said Municipal Commissioner Manoj Kumar Das.

The priority, according to Das, will be domestic users. “Being a civic body, the priority for VMC will always remain the domestic users. But even the commercial users will enjoy all the benefits," he said.

At present, Vadodara is getting 1 lakh cubic metre gas supplied to 74,000 customers in different parts of the city. But with the latest development, the supply will be increased to 4 lakh cubic metres, delivered to 4 lakh customers. “The gas we get from GAIL will be of higher rates than what we have been getting so far. At present, customers pay Rs 7.90 per unit. There will be different formulas for parity between the old and new prices.

One option will be to pass on the price hike in a phased manner and the time limit could be five years, so that it does not pinch the customers," said an official at the Gas Project department.

The piped gas supply distribution network in Vadodara, considered to be the first in Asia, was also eyed by private players like Adanis, but the VMC insisted on running the show on its own.

Last Updated on Friday, 25 September 2009 11:13
 


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