Potholes find way to repaired road

Some workers dug the roadside of Varthur Road, which leads to Nellurhalli, a few weeks ago to lay cables and never repaired it again.

Pic: Satbir Singh.

Some months ago, the road from Varthur Road (near Shell Petrol Pump in front of Siddapura Bus Stand) to Nellurhalli was repaired, much to my delight. It was otherwise marred by potholes which made my commute to work a tedious one.

However some week ago, I saw few people digging the roadside to lay cables. The workers dug the stretch of the repaired road and never repaired it. Now the road is left with potholes again.

I request the concerend authority to please look into this issue.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Shaping Bengaluru: “Citizens can add real capacity through local knowledge, feedback”

We spoke to authors of the Janaagraha report, ‘Shaping Urban India’ to understand its recommendations in the context of Bengaluru.

“The road is broken, buses are overcrowded, traffic disrupts daily life, garbage piles up on the streets”—these are everyday complaints of citizens across Indian cities. In Bengaluru, these issues only seem to be worsening with passing time. Bengaluru’s built-up area grew by 85.19% between 2001 and 2020, resulting in commuters losing 168 hours (one week) annually to traffic congestion. As the city grows rapidly, governance systems, data frameworks, and citizen participation have failed to keep pace with its increasing complexity. What would it take to bridge this gap?  A report by Janaagraha, a non-profit working to improve the quality of…

Similar Story

India Civic Summit 2026: Spotlight on changemakers transforming cities

From waste management to urban forests, the Indian Civic Summit spotlights residents that are driving change in their cities

Cities are the heart of the Indian growth story. Vibrant. Crowded. Diverse. Multidimensional. And yet, as we look around us, we find that they are ridden with problems and face multiple threats to their ecology, habitats and human lives. The crises in our cities make it hard to imagine an urban future that is truly inclusive, sustainable and marked by high liveability standards. But as the oft-cited quote from anthropologist Margaret Mead goes, "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."  That is perhaps the…