Garden City

Is the metro a mixed blessing for Bengaluru's creaky infrastructure?

bmrcl-metro-bengaluru Representational image

The image of Bengaluru as a garden city and the country's technology hub was dented when record rainfall this year exposed its infrastructure woes and the apathy of its municipal agencies in coping with its growing needs.

As the cosmopolitan city of 10 million people witnessed phenomenal growth over the years, thanks to a thriving multibillion-dollar global IT services industry, lack of proportionate investment in basic amenities like stormwater drains, roads and public utilities made it a victim of its own success.

Even as the monsoon pounded the city with nearly 667mm of rainfall as against the average 460mm from June to October, its denizens faced a harrowing time with its fallout—inundation of low-lying areas and flooding of roads, colonies and houses in the hundreds as the outdated and choked drains overflowed and the civic machinery was found wanting.

"Though the city has been expanding rapidly over the years, inadequate investment in keeping pace with its growth and poor maintenance of its amenities, especially drains and roads, made it vulnerable to rains," Bangalore Political Action Committee (BPAC) chief executive Revathy Ashok lamented.

BPAC is a non-profit organisation of citizens groups seeking better governance and quality of life in Bengaluru, the Karnataka state capital.

In the absence of an efficient garbage disposal system, tonnes of solid waste generated across the city found its way into the stormwater drains, blocking the flow of rainwater into the lakes. Illegal constructions on the drains and encroachments in and around the lakes also resulted in rainwater stagnating for days across the city.

"Failure to rejuvenate and maintain the lakes, which have been depleting due to unplanned growth, and illegal construction around them have also blocked the natural flow of rainwater across the city," Revathy told mediapersons.

The fate of Bellandur Lake—the largest in the city's south-east suburb, which has seen frothing due to toxic substances flowing into it through an untreated sewage system from chemical factories and housing colonies around it—outraged the citizens and brought national attention to save it from further pollution.

The National Green Tribunal (NGT) had directed the state in August to submit a detailed plan for reviving the 910-acre lake and asked the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) to shut down about 100 polluting units around it.

Shree D.N., assistant editor at Citizen Matters, Bengaluru, a citizens' civic issues forum, said the city's civic body, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), had to be given sufficient funds to manage the infrastructure and rejuvenate the amenities to improve the quality of life across the city.

"The stormwater drains and sewage system have to be de-silted regularly to ensure they don't overflow with rainwater, which causes severe damage to the city's roads, buildings and other infrastructure facilities," Shree told mediapersons.

The forum also felt more open areas like parks, playgrounds and lung spaces will absorb rainwater and prevent flooding of residential colonies, markets and inundation of low-lying areas across the city.

"Without a holistic approach to clearing encroachments around lakes and stormwater drains, solid waste management and protecting open spaces, the city will suffer from environmental degradation," Shree asserted.

The explosive growth of vehicles in the absence of an efficient public transport service to meet the commuting needs of citizens and a million-strong floating population has compounded the city's infrastructure woes due to gridlocks on its thoroughfares and increasing air and noise pollution.

Though the state-run Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Ltd (BMRCL) began operating the first phase of its extended network in mid-June, the service has not eased the traffic congestion on the arterial roads as it covers only 43km of the city and its ever-expanding suburbs.

On the flip side, Namma Metro, the new swanky public transport service, which ferries around 300,000 commuters daily across the hi-tech metropolis, represents the good, the bad and the ugly aspects of the tech city that became a victim of its success, prosperity and phenomenal growth.

As the hassle-free metro provides speedy commuting on time to the citizens, the cosy ride from east to west and north to south in air-conditioned coaches beckoned many more to shift from crowded and dingy buses, pricey cabs, fleecing autos and personal vehicles, as it saves time and energy.

In spite of just three coaches per train and an unreliable feeder service for last-mile connectivity, the metro has become popular out of necessity with all and sundry, as it is comfortable, safer, punctual and away from choked roads, gridlocked traffic junctions, dusty thoroughfares and unkempt footpaths.

Touted as a boon for a chaotic city and a measure of development, the metro's infrastructure, spanning awkward-looking stations, overground and underground zig-zag tracks and hundreds of pillars—an eyesore in the middle of congested roads—has, however, spoiled the beauty of the pensioners' paradise, robbed the city of its green canopy and changed its landscape for ever.

If the efficient metro service is flaunted as a panacea for the city's ills, the huge loss of its rich legacy, old-world charm and a slice of history is a collateral damage to its stakeholders, especially those who had to forsake homes, shops, offices, buildings and prime properties worth crores of rupees.

As an alternative travel mode for the failure of the state in providing an efficient bus service and not expanding the infrastructure in pace with the city's unchecked growth, the metro is a costly option as it caters to only a few thousand commuters at the expense of hundreds of thousands of hapless people who use buses or other means of transport to travel through slow-moving traffic.

With more people opting for the metro to travel faster, it's a testing time for all to endure the ordeal of standing in packed coaches like sardines. Women, children, senior citizens and physically challenged are a harried lot, as they are squeezed in and out during peak hours while its operator looks away, waiting for more coaches to ease the pressure on them.

The metro project also reshaped the city with its old and dilapidated buildings, making way for the new monstrous structure that claimed many age-old trees and invaded lung spaces.

-IANS

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