Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Urban Planning

Storing water is a thing of the past

Print PDF

The Hindu 18.11.2009

Storing water is a thing of the past

Govind D. Belgaumkar

‘Continuous water supply can bring down the wastage of water considerably’

MANGALORE: Not long ago Hosa Yallapur area of Dharwad and Nrupathunga Betta of Hubli used to get water once in nine days. Today, residents of the areas get round-the-clock water supply.

The lives of the people there have changed for the better after the Hubli-Dharwad Municipal Corporation implemented introduced 24x7 water supply in eight wards.

Storage of water is no longer necessary. H.R. Suresh, a journalist residing at Nrupathunga Betta, said on the phone that he had disposed of four drums and a plastic tank recently.

Retired government servant Vinayak Hampiholi recently sold the plastic tank he had purchased. His nephew, Gopalakrishna, said a couple of concrete tanks in his house would soon be demolished. Thus, houses are becoming more spacious with plastic and steel drums being disposed of, while those constructing new houses no longer need to construct overhead tanks or buy a water pump. For emergencies, however, some people do have underground sumps.

The former Commissioner of the HDMC P. Manivannan has stated in a blog that he used to think that there was no need for 24x7 water supply, and it was sufficient to get water regularly for two to three hours a day.

But he had learnt later that round-the-clock supply in fact brought down wastage considerably, prevented water contamination and, above all, freed women from the drudgery of collecting water at odd hours.

Pointing out that those needing three buckets of water a day would tend to store five buckets of water in the limited-supply situation and emptied the containers every time they got fresh water, Mr. Manivannan, who is now the Deputy Commissioner of Mysore district, said this “repetitive practice” in every household put together would lead to “a colossal wastage of water”.

Mr. Manivannan said that involvement of private firms in maintaining water supply was sometimes wrongly construed as privatisation.

It was not privatisation because there was no transfer of assets and infrastructure from the Government to the private operator on a permanent basis or a long term of 30 years and above; and the government body alone fixed the tariff and managed the staff. He alleged that the lobby benefiting from illegal connections was behind the “privatisation campaign”.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 02:33
 

Follow fire safety regulations: residents of highrises told

Print PDF

Indian Express 17.11.2009

Follow fire safety regulations: residents of highrises told

In a letter, BMC says buildings over 13 floors should have fire safety equipment in place

Following the recent mishap in a high-rise in Thane that claimed lives of six firemen, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation has decided to send notices to high-rise buildings across the city asking the residents to have their internal fire fighting equipment in place. Starting next week, the BMC will send letters to housing societies asking them to follow current fire regulations about internal fire-fighting devices in buildings beyond the 13th floor.

Additional Municipal Commissioner Manisha Mhaiskar said that the BMC’s fire brigade department is equipped to fight fire externally only up to the 13th floor. “It is the standard norm followed worldwide. Any building beyond 13 floors should have all necessary fire fighting equipment in working condition so that firemen can act fast when a fire breaks out,” Mhaiskar said.

The current norms require buildings to have, among other things, a fire-proof refuge area on each floor beyond the thirteenth floor where people can be evacuated. There should be fire detectors, fire extinguishers, fire exits and a fire alarm on each floor.

Mhaiskar said that these norms are usually flouted by most buildings. “The residents are unaware or indifferent to these requirements. If they can invest heavily in manicured green lawns, gymnasium and spa facilities, why can’t they ensure that the fire fighting systems are acquired and functioning? After all it is for their safety,” she added.

Chief Fire Officer Uday Tatkare said, “Buildings have hose pipes on each floor but many a times the pumps are dysfunctional because of which water does not reach the pipes. In the letter, we have asked residents to repair such dysfunctional devices.” But Mhaiskar admitted that the letter can only act as a warning and a request. The BMC does not have authority to penalise those not complying with the norms. “Following the implementation of the Maharashtra Fire Prevention and Life Safety Measures Act of 2006, civic corporations will have the power to take action. As of now we can only request residents to take the necessary precautionary steps,” Mhaiskar added.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 17 November 2009 11:29
 

Disaster Management

Print PDF

Indian Express 17.11.2009

Disaster Management

Roland Emmerich, the maker of blockbusters like Independence Day and Day After Tomorrow, tells us about his latest debacle flick, 2012

What’s your fascination with destroying the world?
I’m a filmmaker, I like fictional stories. I take a lot of inspiration from documentaries, from real-life survivors of disasters. A lot of qualities in us only come out in the face of disaster.

What was the idea behind 2012?
We wanted a peg on which to hang our contemporary Noah’s Ark fable and came across a book about the Mayan Calendar when we were researching a different project. The Mayan calendar is set to reach the end of its 13th cycle on December 21, 2012, and after that, there’s nothing.

Is this your biggest production?
2012 ended up being an enormous production, even by my scale. Every page of the script was a scene where one wondered just what I had in mind, because it seemed so ambitious, so huge. But on the set, I was never pulling my hair out.

How visually different is it going to be compared to your earlier spectacles Independence Day and Day After Tomorrow?
It was more of a challenge than ID and DAT. Also a little nerve wracking as a result. 2012 has the largest number of effects of any of my films, for sure, there are about 1300. For example, the first image that came into my head for 2012, which also ended up being the teaser - is the water coming over the mountains of the Himalayas. The sequence is an extraordinary piece of cinema - visually stunning and terrifyingly real.

John Cusack is a very unlikely hero of a disaster movie.
I was interested in him as a father. No matter what has happened he still wants to do the best that he can for his family because, in the end, that is the most important thing. And even though he has let them down in the past, he will be there for them when it counts. He fit the part perfectly.

Was getting finances tough?
People who read the script said this is undoable. And I said, but we’ll do it. I think it’s worth doing it because when you have something where you have an adrenaline rush, you are nervous about it, and that’s good.

New York and Los Angeles are cities often destroyed in your films. Which one is it this time?
Well it’s a global film. Twisters razed LA in The Day After Tomorrow and aliens did the honours in Independence Day. I wanted the world to be connected through this film. In fact there is a strong Indian connection in the movie where the US government is warned by leading scientists where the problem is discovered.

Haven’t you thought of sequels to your earlier blockbusters?
Not with the earlier films but the plan is to have a TV sequel to 2012 - that it is 2013 and it’s about what happens after the disaster. It is about the resettling of Earth. Harald Kloser (co-writer) and I came up with the idea and we have the luxury of having a producer on the film, Mark Gordon. We said to Mark, “Why don’t you do a TV show that picks up where the movie leaves off and call it 2013?” I think it will focus on a group of people who survived but not on the boats; maybe they were on a piece of land that was spared or one that became an island in the process of the crust moving.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 17 November 2009 11:21
 


Page 301 of 328