Concrete pavements – a boon or a bane?

BBMP has started concreting of pavements at Sadashivnagar. This would normally be a laudable activity, but for some problems.

In my locality, Sadashivnagar, BBMP has suddenly started concreting of pavements. This would normally be a laudable activity, but  for these problems:

1. The pavements are not used by pedestrians at all. The streets in the locality have sparse vehicular and pedestrian traffic. Pedestrians walk on the edge of the road comfortably. The picture below shows one such street at peak traffic time of 5:30 PM. So concreted pavements are unnecessary in this locality.

2. Concrete pavements are not only unnecessary, they are actively harmful. Concrete and tar are the chief causes of a phenomenon called Urban Heat Island – the city is 4-5 degrees warmer than the surrounding space. It is better to have greenery on these pavements than concrete.

3. This is unnecessary expense, particularly if it is planned across the whole city.

4. The BBMP should stop this harmful project and instead spend the taxpayer’s money on these:

  •  Cover drains that cause deaths in the monsoon.
  •  Improve corporation schools, hospitals
  •  Improve sanitation, etc.

The attached sequence of pictures shows what the pavement looks like before, during and after concreting.

$(document).ready(function(){ $(‘.carousel .carousel-inner .item’).first().attr(‘class’, ‘active item’);});  

Comments:

  1. Pramod Naik says:

    Looks better and usable after concreting! Before concreting, it looks unusable anyway with the “greenery” on it.

  2. THYAGARAJAN PARAMASIVAN says:

    I never had problems with my knees until I came to Bangalore. reason – Walking on the concrete pavements of Bangalore. I think the Babus of BBMP have their Brains stuck up somewhere else. I have never seen such unfriendly / uneven concrete pavements anywhere in the world. One can not walk on the pavements in Cox Town, Bharathi Nagar area because the pavements are badly laid. Most of the platforms in Cleveland town are used as urinals. one can not walk on the roads also because the pet dogs dirty the entire area with their faeces. No wonder Bangalore is becoming a S H I T capital from I T capital.

  3. Uday says:

    BBMP seems to think every inch should be filled with concrete. There is no need for that; they can leave some space for water to seep in and leave space for trees to grow.

    This is the new-found madness of BBMP. Just like putting up massive dividers in residential areas to make sure people cannot cross the roads (even when there is no traffic).

Leave a Reply

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

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

City Buzz: Rains batter Gujarat, Delhi | Steps for Telangana’s infrastructure…and more

Other News: Plans for 12 new industrial cities, air pollution raises death risk and urban heat islands raise night-time warmings by 60%.

Rains batter Gujarat and Delhi The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issued a red alert for Gujarat on August 26th because of heavy rains in the state. The rains are expected to continue till August 29th, with the IMD marking the state as a ‘flash flood risk’ zone. Baroda recorded 26 cm of rainfall, the highest in the state, from 8.30 am to 8.30 pm on the August 24. Ahmedabad recorded a rainfall of 10 cm, while the state average was 63.36 mm. Since August 24th, low-lying areas have experienced waterlogging, prompting the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) to conduct rescue…

Similar Story

Draft hoarding policy: Mumbaikars, check it out and send feedback to BMC

Here's the draft and some key points from BMC's new outdoor advertising policy. People can send suggestions/objections till September 9th.

On May 13,  a 140 X 120 feet billboard erected in 2022 collapsed in Ghatkopar, killing 17 people and injuring 74. It clearly violated the permissible limit of 40 X 40 feet specified by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC). It was reported that the advertising agency, Ego Media, which had put up the hoarding had been leased a total of nine billboards by the Government Railway Police (GRP)—four at Ghatkopar and five more at Dadar Tilak Bridge. Moreover, the due tendering process was followed only for three of them. Terms and conditions in the tender document related to the Ghatkopar…