Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
India Newspapers

Mandya City Municipal Council to get a new administrative building

Print PDF

The Hindu       26.08.2014 

Mandya City Municipal Council to get a new administrative building

Foundation stone laying ceremony for proposed building slated for November 1

The general public will no longer have to jostle in the cramped Mandya City Municipal Council (CMC) office here as the authority has decided to construct a full-fledged building, with all modern amenities, on a sprawling site at a cost of Rs. 5 crore.

The CMC, which has 35 wards, has been functioning in a decades-old building off Bangalore-Mysore highway here. Dearth of space and parking lot in the existing building is causing inconvenience to tax payers.

As Hassan has been developing rapidly, the municipal council has realised the need to construct a new building for it, adjacent to the existing one.

Council hall

Foundation stone laying ceremony for the proposed building is likely to be held on November 1 and the CMC is busy preparing a detailed project report (DPR) to be submitted to the Department of Municipal Administration.

Discussion held

The CMC had already discussed with the officials concerned at the Department of Municipal Administration about constructing a new building at a cost of Rs. 5 crore, N.M. Shashikumar, Commissioner of Mandya CMC, here on Sunday.

He said that a new building for CMC had become a necessity as Mandya was one of the fast developing towns.

“The civic authority needs a bigger building to cope with the increase in workforce and administration,” Mr. Shashikumar said.

Council hall

The new building will have a cellar for parking of vehicles. The first floor will have offices of the president, vide-president, Commissioner, standing committee presidents, officers of municipal engineers, town planning, administrative officials, computer section and a few other divisions.

Shifting

The second floor will have a modern council hall with a capacity of 100-150 seats for councillors, press box and officers’ gallery, Mr. Shashikumar said.

All offices of the CMC would be shifted to the new complex once the construction was completed. However, the construction would take 18-24 months. Later, the municipal council would demolish the existing building for constructing the new one.

Work on the construction of the new building would be taken up immediately after the receipt of CMC gets the funds. The proposed CMC building would have modern amenities and fire-fighting equipment, an officer at the Department of Public Works, Ports, Inland and Water Transport (PWD), told The Hindu.

The CMC officials would collect opinions/suggestions from the PWD, Department of Fire and Emergency Services and other departments before completing the DPR.

 

Remove your car, park a waste converter

Print PDF

The Hindu         26.08.2014 

Remove your car, park a waste converter

The compact waste converter takes up as much space as a four-wheeler.— Photo: Sampath Kumar G.P.
The compact waste converter takes up as much space as a four-wheeler.— Photo: Sampath Kumar G.P.

What if the organic waste did not have to be collected from across wards? What if all of it could be processed within the ward itself? With these ideas and a vision of decentralising the waste processing system, a organic waste converter was set up here on Monday.

The waste converter, weighing 1.1 tonne, has the capacity of processing 250 kg of organic waste a day and can cater to about 500 houses. The converter, costing Rs. 10 lakh, was set up at the Madivala Vegetable Market as part of a joint venture by the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike and Aruna Green Ventures, a private business unit based in Bangalore.

Terming it as the “most compact waste converter,” co-owner of Aruna Green Ventures Kumar Subba Rao said the equipment takes up less than one car parking slot. The lifespan of the converter is estimated to be 25 years. Mr. Kumar said the volume reduction of waste in the converter is nearly 85 to 90 per cent. “Almost 60 per cent of the total waste is wet waste. The converter automatically turns on the heating element once it detects wet waste and eliminates most of it, which helps in reducing the volume of waste,” he said. The waste will be converted into bio-manure. The converter runs on electricity with a power-saving mode.

 

Power from solid waste project takes off

Print PDF

The Hindu      19.08.2014 

Power from solid waste project takes off

Mayor inspects site in Kadimipotavaram near G. Konduru mandal

After months of delay, things appear to be falling in place for the Vijayawada Municipal Corporation’s much-hyped project to generate power from solid waste, as the corporation authorities and Mayor Koneru Sridhar inspected a site in Kadimipotavaram village near G.Konduru mandal on Monday.

The proposed project will come up at a big site, and the authorities inspected the 22-acre site at the village for land acquisition. After interacting with villagers, Commissioner C. Hari Kiran and Mayor K. Sridhar directed the authorities to plant flags, identifying the land boundary.

“There is a need to take up measures for scientific disposal of solid waste. Every day, more solid waste is generated in the city, and this project will address such issues. After conducting a final inspection very shortly, measures will be initiated for land acquisition,” the Commissioner said in a press release. Every day, the city generates nearly 500 tonnes of solid waste, and they are dumped at Jakkampudi, Ajithsingh Nagar and Pathapadu on the city outskirts.

 


Page 232 of 4907