Steel flyover debate: Let a plan drive the city transport

None of us would go about building our own homes without a well thought out plan. Why should we be willing to accept such an approach for our own home, the great city of Bengaluru?

Much has been written, in social media circles, against the expensive, potentially ugly steel bridge that is going to come at a cost of Rs 1800 Cr (estimated) to the public exchequer of the state of Karnataka. There are additional costs of course, trees, precious, full grown trees that have to be chopped off. Aesthetics.

A steel structure… don’t get me wrong, I am an engineer, I love steel…is going to snake through town from Chalukya circle to Hebbal flyover. Beautiful heritage buildings and land. Compelling arguments have been made by many people along these lines, and they are right. What I want to expand on are the arguments (none of them my original thoughts) that appeal most to me.

The first question anyone should ask is – what is the problem being solved? With the Steel Bridge or an alternative solution. Apparently, it is to make it easier to get to the airport (for somebody, not clear who). So the thing to do is to go look at some data. Since traffic count data is not accessible easily, google maps with traffic turned is the best substitute. What does a typical weekday traffic map tell us? Both morning and evening rush hour show a terrible bottleneck between the elevated expressway and the mid point of Hebbal flyover.

Traffic map on Bellary Road. Courtesy: Google maps

That indicates that Hebbal flyover is a choke point for traffic entering into the core city area inside the ring road. The morning map also shows bad traffic coming into the city from a little before Sanjay Nagar main road past Mekhri circle all the way down including along palace grounds. This pattern varies a bit for different days of the week, but the image is representative. Rest of the road is typical slow moving Bengaluru peak hour traffic, nothing out of the ordinary. What will the elevated steel road do?

Traffic map on Bellary Road. Courtesy: Google maps

The only change that would happen is that traffic from Chalukya hotel to Hebbal flyover will be a nice green in the map. Will the bottleneck at the Hebbal flyover and along palace grounds go away? Palace grounds, maybe. Hebbal flyover, I am not sure. However, one thing is for sure. All that traffic will be dumped right at Hebbal and at Chalukya circle. Can the roads leading to the flyover, which look quite busy already, supply or evacuate the traffic to and from the steel bridge? How about at Hebbal flyover?

Keep in mind that the steel bridge is also going to attract some additional vehicular traffic through the core city until it becomes a bad as the other alternatives. How long before we have an entirely new mess on our hands? I don’t have the exact numbers or traffic simulations, but it will be a safe bet that the answer is “not very long”.

What is the vision for the city?

The second question set will sound rather philosophical, but it is important. How does this design fit in to our vision for the city. Do we have a vision? What is that vision? What is the process to articulate and give light to that vision?

What the steel flyover plan says out loud is that the intent is to enable motor vehicle movement. The vision I subscribe to is people movement. I submit that a vision should be formulated by gathering inputs from all citizens of the city and a comprehensive planning process executed by a Metropolitan Planning Committee (MPC) and executed by all agencies including a Unified Metropolitan Transit Authority (UMTA) is the way to go. These are not made up terms. They have been articulated over the years at several levels and in various fora and reports. In fact, the MPC is a legal mandate and one exists for this city as a paper agency to meet that requirement.

Think about it. None of us would go about building our own homes without a well thought out plan and without consideration for factors like water and ventilation and lighting and flow of people and energy. We would certainly not agree to build it as per the contractor’s or architect’s specification without our requirements factored in. After all, we are paying! Why should we be willing to accept such an approach for our home, this great city of Bengaluru?

The third question is on what the money buys us. Rs 1800 Crores! Rs 18,00,00,00,000. At Rs 35,00,000 a bus, one can buy 5142 regular buses. In other words, a good chunk of BMTCs 6500 buses, many of which are well past retirement age, spewing toxic soot and PM 10/PM 2.5 pollutants can be replaced with new, higher emission standard buses.

Namma railu can solve congestion with less cost

Here is another alternative. There is a beautiful, under-utilised railway line going right past the trumpet interchange. Based on the old Namma Railu RITES report, with a few hundred crores and a signalling system upgrade, a very good system to move people to the airport from many city railway stations is very doable. We would be also substantially upgrading the city transit infra. All that still leaves money left for new buses and footpaths and other improvements that encourage public transport and NMT all over the city. The point is, there are many better ways to use the money.

Finally, think of what happens under this bridge. Our city is full of examples of all these bridges with just crap underneath. No need to cite examples. If you live here, you have seen the dark underbelly of various elevated structures, with garbage and urine, pedestrian unfriendly, dark foreboding places. Do we need one more?

We have suffered for long with the notorious traffic in our city and pay a very heavy price in terms of time, pollution and lives. I submit that much of this suffering is grossly aggravated by other “plan” equivalents of this steel bridge – expensive, poorly designed, wrongly prioritized solutions implemented without a blue print. The KR Puram flyover, Silkboard interchange, ORR split flyovers, Richmond circle flyover are all examples. Let us stop this today. Let a plan drive the city instead of the city driving the plan. The first step to fight for this change is to join the protest against the #SteelFlyover. That is why I plan to join.

The opinions expressed here are author’s own. Citizen Matters as a news analysis website, makes an attempt to present all sides of the issue, but does not endorse or reject them.

Related Articles

BDA keeps steel flyover on hold after drawing flak from citizens

Comments:

  1. Raghuraman Kalyanaraman says:

    The project can cost much less if a flyover from National College side of Chalukya circle to
    Cauvery theater circle is done. In addition , a 4 lane flyover across hebbal railway gate is enough.

    Second project can be a 4 lane road from hosur road to Bagalur road, which will act as a north south expressway.

    The steel flyover is a scam, and idiotic.

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

,

Maharashtra cities need a mobility fix: Building roads not a solution

Mumbai and other urban centres in Maharashtra have seen a surge in vehicle ownership, while public transport needs have not been met.

Maharashtra, one of India’s most urbanised States, faces a transportation crisis that has snowballed into a public health, environmental, and economic challenge. With over half its population residing in urban areas, Maharashtra is home to 28 municipal corporations — the highest in the country. Cities like Mumbai and Pune are struggling with the relentless surge in vehicle ownership, which has led to traffic congestion, alarming pollution levels, and a steep rise in road crashes.  Despite these pressing concerns, many cities have pursued an approach focused on expanding road infrastructure, relying on flyovers and highways to absorb traffic overflow. However, experts…

Similar Story

Walkability and affordable transit ignored as elections focus on big projects in Mumbai

Political parties are harping on big-ticket projects, while hardly anyone is focusing on the city's lifelines — BEST and railways.

As the Maharashtra state elections get underway, the daily struggles of Mumbai's citizens, especially their commuting woes, seem to be overlooked in the electoral discourse. Political parties are focusing on massive infrastructure projects, sidelining the city's lifelines like the Railways and the Brihanmumbai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) Undertaking in favour of the Metro Rail. Despite being partially operational, the Metro has yet to make a significant impact. Surveys reveal that 52% of Mumbaikars walk to work, yet on many roads, pedestrian infrastructure remains neglected, encroached upon, and unusable. While traffic congestion has made commuting a nightmare, trains are perennially…