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Urban Planning

Sewer system may be extended

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The Hindu           27.06.2011

Sewer system may be extended

S.Ganesan

A new project to extend the underground drainage system to the uncovered areas of the city is likely to be taken up soon. The Tiruchi Corporation would soon put in a request to the Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage (TWAD) Board to take up a detailed study and prepare a project report for extending the underground sewerage system to the uncovered areas in the city. The city is currently served by an underground sewer system, which was laid under two different projects first in the early 1990s and the second which was completed a few years back. The recent project was executed under the National River Conservation Programme at a cost of about Rs.116 crore, with a major portion of the funding coming from the Union government. The project covered Srirangam and Golden Rock areas, apart from a few places within the city.

However, large parts of the city suburbs are not connected to the network. While the old sewer system has a capacity of over 20,000 connections, the NRCP scheme added about 23,700 connections. The new project for the omitted areas is likely to have a capacity of at least 20,000 connections.

Among the important areas left without underground sewer system are K.K.Nagar, Ponmalaipatti, Edamalaipattipudur, Karumandapam, parts of Srirangam and Ariyamangalam. The new sewer scheme is likely to entail building underground sewer lines for not less than 100 km. According to sources, the new project would ensure that almost the entire population within the Corporation limits was covered.

Chief Minister Jayalalithaa after her recent visit to Srirangam had held discussions with senior officials at Chennai on extending the sewer system to the uncovered areas in the city.

The Corporation Council, at its next meeting, would discuss an official resolution on requesting the TWAD Board to take up the study and prepare the project report. The TWAD Board would be requested to prepare the report in consultation with the Corporation engineers so that all parts of the city were covered. The Corporation would also request the TWAD Board to execute the project.

Last Updated on Monday, 27 June 2011 04:59
 

Victoria Public Hall restoration to be completed by June

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The Hindu       03.05.2011

Victoria Public Hall restoration to be completed by June

Staff Reporter
A view of the Victoria Public Hall. — Photo: R.Ragu
A view of the Victoria Public Hall. — Photo: R.Ragu

The Victoria Public Hall will be thrown open to the public by July with the Chennai Corporation set to complete the project to restore the heritage structure by June.

The project, to restore the nearly 110-year-old building to its original glory, was taken up a year ago at a cost of Rs.3.96 crore under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission.

Mayor M.Subramanian, who inspected the restoration work on Monday, said the damaged roof has been replaced and work on the wooden flooring and staircase is in progress.

Once the work is finished, sound and light show would be conducted on the ground floor, whose built-up area is 13,342 sq.ft. The first floor, which has a built-up area of 12, 541 sq.ft., would be used to conduct cultural programmes. The hall would have a seating capacity of 600 persons.

Archaeological Survey of India, Anna University and Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage, a voluntary organisation, are some of the agencies that conduct periodical review of the restoration work.

A press release from the Corporation said that the Victoria Public Hall, which is an example of Indo-Saracenic architecture, was built by Namperumal Chetty in 1890. Renovation work of the hall was first carried out in 1967 and the then Chief Minister C.N.Annadurai dedicated it for public use.

After a few years, the building remained closed for over 40 years. Several eminent personalities, including Mahatma Gandhi and Swami Vivekananda, have visited the hall.

 

Questions remain on city's disaster preparedness

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The Hindu          17.03.2011

Questions remain on city's disaster preparedness

City Bureau

Studies have proved northern parts of the city have lower resilience compared to areas in south and west

Plugging loopholes: Various measures at different levels are imperative to reduce the damage to structures during natural disasters. An aerial view of Vadapalani. — Photo: S.S.Kumar
Plugging loopholes: Various measures at different levels are imperative to reduce the damage to structures during natural disasters. An aerial view of Vadapalani. — Photo: S.S.Kumar

The combination of densely populated areas in the city and the risk of climate-related hazards make Chennai vulnerable to disaster. A study brought out by Chennai Corporation, Kyoto University and the University of Madras only goes to prove this. It shows that northern parts of the city have lower resilience compared to areas in the south and west.

The recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan has awakened the curiosity of the residents on how prepared the city is in case of a possible calamity. Unlike the tsunami warning alert, there is no reliable technology to forewarn earthquakes. Much of the emphasis therefore is on how stringently buildings have adhered to the norms laid by the National Building Code.

The Tamil Nadu Common Building Rules for Urban Local Bodies is under the consideration of the State government. It would prescribe safety norms as a measure to protect buildings during natural calamities. If implemented, new constructions would require specific certification by professionals.

The one question that more people are asking now is: How capable is the city's infrastructure and buildings, particularly high rises, of surviving any natural disaster? Around 25 high rise structures are permitted in the Chennai Metropolitan Area every year.

The Fire and Rescue Services, one of the agencies that issue no-objection certificates to building whose height is above 15 metres, has so far given clearance to 964 high rise structures in Chennai and its suburbs. R. Nataraj, Director, Fire and Rescue Services, says the issue, however, is with buildings that are less than 15 metres tall and high rise structures that get the certification and subsequently violate by adding additional floors.

Vertical growth

Chennai Corporation is carrying out an analysis of 65,000 buildings with more than one storey to see how vulnerable they are to any calamity. The civic body's analysis of over 35,000 such buildings has been completed so far. The retrofitting measures would be recommended for the surveyed buildings.

With many high rise buildings, quite a few of them with 19 and more floors, getting ready to dot the skyline, experts say wind and earthquake resistance should be factors the developers should keep in mind while designing. However, the city does not have any body that certifies whether a building is earthquake resistant. A structural engineer can be approached and increasingly it is faculty members from IIT-Madras and Anna University who are approached.

According to C.V.R. Murty and Meher Prasad A., professors, Department of Civil Engineering, IIT-Madras, in bigger cities, including Mumbai, a tall building committee comprises experts from the field of building design and construction safety. In international practice, the complete design is over before the construction starts, whereas this is not the case here.CMDA vice-chairperson Susan Mathew says that the quality of construction of new structures in the CMA depend more on the “honesty of purpose of the structural engineers” who certify the building for earthquake resistance. She stresses the need for measures towards better monitoring of the quality of construction by local bodies in the CMA.

Developers agree that taller the building, the more the challenge as one needs to get more NOCs. “We adhere to the National Building Code (NBC) norms, but Chennai has a long way to go. We, for instance, have a material testing lab to test the strength of materials,” says V.S. Suresh, MD, Real Value Promoters Private Limited. He suggests that the approving authority should have a team that checks if the NBC regulation is adhered to and a panel of structural engineers be formed to certify.

Chennai is on Seismic Zone 3, which means it is on the moderate damage risk zone. The data about earthquake would be posted on the IMD website within 20 minutes. It is the Regional Meteorological Centre that co-ordinates with the State-level Disaster Management Cell only when there is a catastrophe warning when the magnitude is over 7 on the Richter scale, the officials said.

Y.E.A. Raj, Deputy Director General of Meteorology, RMC, says Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) at Hyderabad is the authorised agency to monitor ocean activity and tsunami. INCOIS would communicate to Central government and in turn that would be conveyed to the State government.

The awareness level among residents of several apartment complexes is equally low. A.V. Surendran, president of Welfare Association, Rajaji Nagar, Villivakkam, said the residents know only the fundamentals of things to do during earthquake. “We are planning to conduct mock drill about fire accidents in future.”

Officials from the Schools Education Department say that instructions were given to schools to equip students with life skills after the Kumbakonam fire tragedy but greater emphasis is needed to impart the skills on continuous basis. Much of such skills lie with individual schools to teach.

The Chennai Corporation has created a database of teams of volunteers who would react to any disaster. A total of 155 first aid teams have been constituted in the city with a total of 465 volunteers.

Other teams that have been constituted by the civic body include rescue and relief team, communication team, transportation team and carcass removal team.

(With inputs from Liffy Thomas, Aloysius Xavier Lopez and K. Lakshmi)
 


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