This railway underbridge space has a story to tell

From a dark and dreary under-bridge area to a bright and lively public space, the story of a transformation.

Railway Under-Bridge near Bengaluru’s Shivananda Circle is no longer an ugly, stinking, dangerous thoroughfare for pedestrians. It has been transformed in five steps:

Step 1 (June 2016): Railways staff + citizen volunteers de-poster, remove garbage and transform 80% of the RUB over three days.

The Ugly Indian poster-repellent design was used, with striking bright colours, to brighten up an otherwise dark and dreary under-bridge place.

See the album of Spotfix no 1 here: https://www.facebook.com/theugl.yindian/photos/…

Step 2 (July 2016): BBMP fixes the footpath and repairs the pathways, including installing lights

Step 3 (July 2016): Railways fixes the leaking roof and trims the bushes, clears the garbage from its part of the bridge

Step 4: (July-Sept 2016): The under-bridge space was monitored for three months and regular maintenance was ensured.

People who post posters in Bengaluru respect good design. The quality of the design makes it look like tile work from a distance. This trick worked. Only four posters appeared after three months – that too on the front portion of the bridge where there is no poster-repellent design. Pedestrian movement increases as it is now a well-lit clean and safe zone, and ugly/illegal activities are eliminated.

Step 5: Final Spotfix: to paint the balance 20% and beautify the vicinity.


Pics: The Ugly Indian

See the full album of this Spotfix here.

This spotfix is a great example of positive partnership between citizens, city government (BBMP) and Indian Railways – to fix a public asset that lies in a no-man’s land, with shared, but undefined responsibilities between multiple entities.

Great work by all volunteers! Kaam Chalu Mooh Bandh!

Related Articles

Being The Ugly Indian: It’s all about fixing whatever we can
All it took was Rs 850/- to fix the ugly spot in Church Street

Comments:

  1. vivekeyecare1 says:

    It is great to learn that ugly place was turned into beautiful & useful underpass with the cooperation and coordinated effort of all concerned agencies. Perhaps somebody has to coordinate these activities and without such coordination hings will not move in the riight direction. Thanks for Ugly Indian for that effort.

    Sri Vivekananda Sevashrama under sacha Bharat Abhayan helps some government schools to keep their premises clean by supplying brooms, Plastic buckets Etc. and supplies some saplings to be -planted after cleaning..
    Thank you for your efforts. May your tribe increase
    It is action that is required and not loose talk.

    Venkatesha Murthy

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

Conspicuous by absence in Mumbai election campaign: BMC elections

Delay in BMC elections hits the quality of everyday life in Mumbai. The fact that no political party is raising hell over this in their current campaigns speaks volumes.

In 2022, with the world just recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, it didn’t seem extraordinary when elections to the richest civic body, Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) were postponed. Though the reasons for postponement were a case in the Supreme Court about OBC seats and an earlier delimitation exercise, any aberrations to the existing systems were acceptable in the backdrop of two ghastly COVID-19 waves and Omicron.  But decisions that seemed fine at that point have outlived the concession. In Mumbai, as the city prepares for the state assembly elections, the elephant in the room is actually the BMC elections. Not to…

Similar Story

MCAP: Initiated in 2022, how effective is plan to mitigate climate change in Mumbai?

The Mumbai Climate Action Plan (MCAP),launched in 2022, is a step in the right direction but its implementation leaves a lot to be desired.

Scorching heat waves, devastating floods, a yearly increase in temperature, high AQI levels, Mumbai has seen it all over the past few decades, with no sign that the vagaries of climate will let up anytime soon. If the island city is to weather the storm of climate change, it requires a concrete map to navigate the next couple of decades. The Mumbai Climate Action Plan (MCAP), created by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) with the World Resources Institute (WRI) as a knowledge partner, is such a map. In 2020, Mumbai became a part of the global C40 network, pledging  a…