Road to Mahabalipuram sparkles for Modi – Xi summit. EllamEyewaas?

The road from Chennai airport to Mahabalipuram is being given an unprecedented face lift for Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit. The question on most locals' minds is - do we not deserve such clean and good roads? All the time?

The city is all set to provide passage to the Chinese President Xi Jinping who is heading to the temple town of Mahabalipuram, roughly 60kms away from Chennai, for his meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi (the PM is expected to fly into Mahabalipuram). In order to make the city ‘presentable’,  Greater Chennai Corporation has taken up a series of beautification activities along the route to Mahabalipuram. Multiple pockets have been spruced up by repairing roads, painting the road dividers, cleaning and recolouring the barricades and in some places, covering up the ugly patches. 

Various departments of the City administration have deployed a number of workers to give a makeover to the 20km stretch from ITC Grand Chola hotel to Sholinganallur via OMR and further onto Akkarai via the East Coast Road link road, and then lead up to Mahabalipuram, the path which will be taken by the VVIP convoys. 

It is not just the roads and barricades but there are new Smart Bike points set up between Madhya Kailash and Tidel Park- I think this has been there for a while. A new Amma Canteen is being built with an e-toilet next to it near Karapakkam as well.

The sad truth is that all the roads in Chennai face similar issues, but are ignored until a VVIP decides to ply on them. A ride from Thiruvanmiyur to Akkarai via ECR will speak volumes of the stark contrast to the parallel road being readied for the VVIP. The story is similar beyond Sholinganallur where dividers are broken, dirty and full of pan stains.

It is not that the Corporation is unaware of the issues. A message circulating on social media, purportedly a Government circular, details out the exact locations where the roads need to be repaired and fixed before Oct 11th, and who is responsible for the same. Zonal officials or Bus Route Roads Department of GCC, or State Highways Department. They know what needs to be done, they just don’t feel the need to do it for ordinary citizens.

I suppose the citizens have to be thankful for this VVIP movement which is enabling a flow of services. It is now up to them to use and maintain them well as the next VVIP movement could be quite some time away! 

[All photos by the Author]

Comments:

  1. Omkar says:

    Good information.

  2. N SUBRAMANIAN says:

    Although keeping the roads clean and decorating the roads is important when such VVIp visits happen. Taxpayer who are normal citizens can also get such clean and decorated roads

  3. Krish says:

    yes we deserve until stop littering and polluting the same.

  4. H H Subramani says:

    Hoping that Corporation will maintain the city in same order is a distant dream. Let them address chronic issues like garbage disposal/clearance, drainage, pot-holes, cut-open roads left unfilled for months and lack of public vehicle parking. If they achieved and regulated these, we can feel like VIPs too!

  5. Prahlad says:

    It will be great if they treat public also VIPs if that happens whole Chennai will be the best city in the world .

Leave a Reply

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

Similar Story

India Civic Summit 2026: Spotlight on changemakers transforming cities

From waste management to urban forests, the Indian Civic Summit spotlights residents that are driving change in their cities

Cities are the heart of the Indian growth story. Vibrant. Crowded. Diverse. Multidimensional. And yet, as we look around us, we find that they are ridden with problems and face multiple threats to their ecology, habitats and human lives. The crises in our cities make it hard to imagine an urban future that is truly inclusive, sustainable and marked by high liveability standards. But as the oft-cited quote from anthropologist Margaret Mead goes, "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."  That is perhaps the…

Similar Story

Stormwater, floods and the city: Inside a citizen audit of Bengaluru’s K200 drain

A walk along Bengaluru’s K200 stormwater drain shows shifting conditions every 100 metres, revealing flooding risks and repair possibilities.

I have been following the K100 stormwater drain (SWD) project for some time and had loosely worked on it in the past. Once neglected, this stretch from Majestic to Bellandur Lake has gradually been transformed into a critical part of the neighbourhood’s civic infrastructure. As I have a theoretical understanding of what Bengaluru’s stormwater drains are intended to do and why they matter, a citizen audit of the K200 SWD held on January 31st felt like a chance to move beyond theory and see things up close. The proposed audit focused on a stretch of the K200 running from HSR…