Agara SEZ to multiply traffic on Sarjapur Road

The Manipal ETA Infotech project has got the approval from the authorities, even though the assessments highlight the poor traffic plan. Traffic police say they don’t have any say in this.

In Part I and Part II of the series, Citizen Matters had explained how the Manipal ETA Infotech is constructing a multi-crore project near Agara lake, consuming the wetland and lake drain, and how the authorities like Ministry of Environment and Forests have approved the project. Part III explains the traffic-related problems the project has brought in.

Studies – including those submitted by the builder – show that the Sarjapur Road is going to be completely choked once the project by Manipal ETA Infotech comes up. The project will have parking facility for over 14,400 vehicles. The entire complex is supposed to be operational by 2014-15.

The 15.5 meter road in front of Manipal ETA Infotech. The entrance to the complex can be seen on the left. Pic: Navya P K

The project is located along a narrow section of Sarjapur Road. Currently the width of this stretch is only 15.5 meters, about 50 feet. The road stretches for about two kilometres straight, without any intersection, between two end points of Agara lake. Sarjapur Road meets the Outer Ring Road connecting Silk Board and Iblur, at the Agara bus stand.

IISc report projects very poor traffic service

Even though the road is narrow, traffic is manageable on this stretch now, as there are no intersections or cross traffic. The IISc study shows that the current Level of Service (LOS) of the road is ‘C’ i.e, ‘average/fair’. LOS is a standard grading system on the effectiveness of service. LOS grades here range from ‘A’ to ‘F’, with ‘A’ being the best grade and ‘F’ the worst.

The study says that, once the project comes up, the traffic volume will almost double. The current traffic is estimated to be 2000 PCUs (Passenger Car Units) per hour, which may go up to 3750 PCUs/hour after project completion. But the road does have not capacity to handle such traffic; its capacity is only 3500 PCUs/hour. Because of this, the LOS will go down to ‘F’ i.e, ‘very very poor’, says the study.

Ironically, the traffic management study submitted by Mantri Developers (who is building the project) also says the same thing. The consultancy ‘Consortia of Infrastructure Engineers’, headed by traffic expert Prof M N Sreehari, had done the study for Mantri. This report says that the current LOS is ‘B’, which will go down to ‘F’ once the project is up.

IISc Etr55 Bellanduru Report by Citizen Matters

The IISc report on ‘Conservation of Bellandur Wetlands’ that estimates the environmental damage and traffic bottlenecks caused by the SEZ project coming up off Sarjapur Road

It is not clear how the project was approved, despite the traffic study giving this conclusion .

Traffic police have no say in traffic plans

Traffic police is usually not consulted even when such mega-structures are approved in the city. “No one asks us for approval or opinion. There is no system for this,” says M A Saleem, ACP (Traffic). He says that the project will cause traffic congestion, and that the approach roads on both ends of Agara lake would be clogged.

The IISc report points out to the traffic bottlenecks before and after the project.

“Already congestion is high on the stretch from Silk Board to Jayadeva flyover, especially since the flyovers in Marathahalli came up,”  he says. There is already a proposal to build an elevated corridor between Silk Board and Forum Mall because of such congestion.

On Sarjapur Road too, there was a plan sometime ago, to build underpasses and flyovers. The project was scrapped after strong protests from residents nearby, and an expose that showed traffic statistics were falsified at the BDA to get approvals.

Saleem says that an elevated road can be built on this stretch instead. “We have proposed to the BDA to build an elevated corridor from Madiwala Checkpost to Jakkasandra.” He says that elevated roads are better compared to underpasses. “Underpasses do not increase capacity of the road and will hinder future development, unlike elevated corridors. The decision is up to the BDA now,” he says.

Proceeding at any cost

In a nutshell, this massive 72-acre 2300-crore SEZ-offices-residences project is proceeding despite messing up with interlinked lake drains and increasing the risk of flooding, getting a BWSSB no-objection despite the water board not knowing about the whole project, even though commercial borewells barred by a central ruling, a city zoning land use map that was changed in the last minute, and a traffic study that shows that road condition is going to be very poor.  

None of the city authorities appear to be able to re-examine approvals for the project. Everyone is looking the other way. However, one door still remains open at the regional office of the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF), which says it will act if a complaint is made.

The project is supposed to be completed by 2014-15.

Comments:

  1. Manukrishna says:

    Excellent coverage. Exposes clout of builders, and their ever strengthening nexus with authorities. Very likely that the existing 50ft road will be widened by encroaching Agara lake. What is the procedure to make MoEF take this issue up?

  2. Navya P K says:

    Hi Manukrishna, you can give a written complaint to MoEF addressing it to Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (APCCF), MoEF Southern Regional Office, and mark copies to:
    1) Member Secretary, KSPCB (Karnataka State Pollution Control Board)
    2) Member Secretary, SEIAA (State Environment Impact Assessment Authority)

    MoEF Southern Regional Office is in Kendriya Sadan, Koramangala.

  3. Raja Kasinathan says:

    Ridiculous. Why should MoEF expect someone to give complaint, when it is their duty to stop such things? Is this a hidden thing which only a common man can understand?

  4. Raja Kasinathan says:

    The RWA’s should have submitted the report to Lok Ayukta instead of all other organizations

  5. Priyamvatha Natarajan says:

    ‘@Manukrishna – Are you going to submit a complaint?. @Navya – Can you help us exchange our email ids..I dont want it to be displayed. Can I contact you via contact the author link and Manukrishna can also do the same. Thanks for the article and sharing the IISc’s work.

  6. Badal Itsme says:

    Let us get together and take up a stand for the Wet land and try to preserve it.It definitely effect the environment a lot.These place should be preserved as a Green area.
    Unless and until we protest it will not stop.

  7. Saroj Panigrahy says:

    Well, the traffic can be managed if the road is made one way from Lemon Grass square till Agara busstop.

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

The fight over Jai Bhim Nagar: Whose land is it, anyway?

Settlers in Jai Bhim Nagar in Powai’s Hiranandani Gardens were forcefully evicted in June. And it’s a contentious move in more ways than one.

A tarp-covered shed on a busy sidewalk in Powai lights up every evening with the cacophony of children. The ‘sabki library’ is a makeshift after-school space for the children of Jai Bhim Nagar living on the sidewalk, where they show up diligently to study with volunteers from nearby IIT Bombay.  The library was set up there over three months ago, soon after the Jai Bhim Nagar settlement was demolished, and its residents forcibly evicted. While many residents from the 600-odd homes have shifted elsewhere since then, about 150-200 families still live on the streets surrounding the demolished slum. “We have…

Similar Story

Mumbai infrastructure report card: How have big ticket projects fared in last five years?

As elections approach, political parties try to gain mileage from recent infrastructure projects. But are Mumbaikars convinced?

Several infrastructure projects have been launched or inaugurated in Mumbai over the last five years, in the backdrop of huge political upheavals in Maharashtra with unexpected alliances, fractured coalitions, and the overthrow of the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) by the Eknath Shinde-led Mahayuti. Celebrated as an engineering feat, the Mumbai Coastal Road, named Dharmveer Swarajya Rakshak Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj Coastal Road, was inaugurated by chief minister Eknath Shinde with deputy chief ministers Devendra Fadnavis and Ajit Pawar on 11th March. This is amongst the major infrastructure projects that have been completed in the past five years and being counted as one…