South Bangalore’s red letter day

Citizens in JP Nagar and BTM Layout have been rankled recently when red colour signs showed up on compound walls and entrances of homes and shops. The signs indicated that 7-8 metres of their property is going to acquired for yet another roadwidening project.

Last month, the BBMP decided it was going to widen the 14.5 kms-stretch from Silkboard (Hosur Road) through BTM Layout and JP Nagar to Mysore Road.

Do not miss our exclusive story for more on this and what citizens and shopkeepers are doing to protect their interests. What will happen over the next few months is unclear, but the BBMP says it is simply following Bengaluru’s Comprehensive Development Plan (CDP 2005-15) which designated this road for expansion.

Is it all that simple? Turn back to some recent history. The current CDP was drafted in 2005, and before the state government put its approval in June 2007, it went through a process that had more red marks on it that all of BBMP’s signs on the ring road.

First, it was drafted by the BDA, instead of the BMRDA, which was jurisdictionally wrong. Second, over 7200 objections were received from citizens. The designation of road corridors (for expansion) was in the list of contested issues. Third, recommendations from the BMRDA and the state government’s own Thomas Committee that went into citizens’ objections, were ignored by the BDA. The state government ‘approved’ the CDP, despite all this. All of this is recorded in a PIL citizens filed at the High Court in 2008. At the time of writing, the case was to come up for its final hearing.

Furthermore, BBMP says Transfer of Revelopment Rights (TDR) will be given to owners and lease-holders losing property. TDR rules say that if you lose 600 sq.ft of space, you will get compensatory certificates for 900 sq.ft.

Owners can sell this right to a developer for money, who in turn can use this to add more floor space elsewhere, which could increase congestion there. Alternatively, owners can also increase the built up area on the same property, which could lead to more congestion on the same road. So much for regulated growth.

So should citizens lose their property in vain? This is the muddy foundation on which the BBMP has undertaken this widening project. ⊕

Comments:

  1. BN Gundu Rao says:

    It is true that Bangalore has grown beyond leaps and bounds espicially in the middle 90’s and further tillnow. Further, the growth of vehicles plying on the roads is unimaginable.There are abundent manufactors of vehicles available now to push their products, conducting loan melas. The traffic density is abnormal, espically in the city limits. There is urgent need to redress the problem. It is natural that there will be lot of inconvenience to the owners of property held by them for time long.But a solution to this is immenent. They should not be taken for granted to usurp their properties. Instead, an amicable solution needs to be encouraged.

Leave a Reply

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

Similar Story

The infrastructure of waiting: How Bengaluru’s gridlock steals our right to time

Bengaluru needs accessible infrastructure that makes life easier for everyone, not tunnels and corridors built for a privileged few.

Selomi's text arrived at 7 am. "Let's leave by 8.30. The traffic will be brutal otherwise." We both live about 10 kilometres from the government office we had been going to every day for the last two weeks. The nearest metro station is four kilometres from our homes, which means forty minutes to reach it, twenty on the metro, and twenty-five on foot from Vidhana Soudha to the office. An hour and twenty minutes each way, assuming nothing goes wrong. In Bengaluru, something always does. By the end of the second week, we had the routine down. Coffee in a…

Similar Story

How accessible is Koramangala? A case study on bus connectivity challenges

While 318 routes touch this Bengaluru suburb, gaps in last-mile connectivity and weak connections remain a problem.

Koramangala is one of Bengaluru’s most recognisable neighbourhoods. Originally planned as a suburb, it witnessed a transformation in the 1990s thanks to its connectivity to Electronic City and the IT corridors along Outer Ring Road. This boom drew skilled professionals from across the country, converting Koramangala into a vibrant commercial hub. With its rapid growth, the question of public transport became even more important, not just for residents, but also for the businesses that thrive here. During OpenCity’s Bengaluru Datajam, organised around the theme of public transport, our group focused on Koramangala’s bus connectivity with the rest of the city.…