Let’s make the city beautiful…

Dumping_Ground_01

This is one of the main entry points to where I live
near Richards Town. It’s a small residential layout, off
Lazar Road. This view is nice and flattering – peaceful,
green, orderly – to show what a nice looking community
this could be.

Dumping_Ground_02

Here’s a view from the other end of the road, where one
vacant site has been used as a dumping ground for years.
What typically happens to any site where the owner could
be stationed elsewhere and doesn’t really make an
appearance.

At this location, the build-up is close to nine feet from
road level. A lot of it is building debris from nearby demolitions
and construction work. If you’re re-doing your bathroom for
instance, and want to get rid of a stinky, old, blue commode,
wait until dark and do a quick heave-ho. As simple as that.

The neighborhood has no complaints – it’s a convenient
dumping ground. But the people who live "next door" have
a really rough time. In addition to an eye-sore, they have
to survive the stench emanating from rotting food remnants
and an easy access "public loo" that the site has also become.

If you’re living outside of Bangalore and own a site in the city,
take a another look at the second picture. A good example of
what could greet you if you pay a surprise visit one of these days.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Similar Story

How women in Bengaluru navigate their working lives and the city

City of Women is an upcoming podcast about how women in the city explores the calculated strategies, the backdoor negotiations and the sometimes absurd lengths women go to have fun and feel free in their city. Every Indian woman knows that being out in the city comes with rules - rules that determine who gets to be where and what you can and can’t do. But this show is not about those rules. It’s about how they get broken, bent, and jumped over when women decide to do things just for themselves. City of Women is fun, complex, and a…

Similar Story

Unseen work, unheard stories: A convention on women and labour

A unique day-long initiative on February 29, 2020 to create a platform for women to honour and amplify their voices, their stories, and their knowledge.

Women’s labour is often unseen and their stories, often unheard. This unseen, invisible, and often unpaid labour is the ground upon which all ‘development’ in this monster economy takes place. We are witness to a moment in time when women are organising, fighting, and demanding their rights, questioning the very ideas of growth, progress and citizenship. In short, they are making their voices heard and making their labour visible. As part of our ongoing Satyagraha for the Sacred Economy, Gram Seva Sangh, Centre for Budget and Policy Studies along with few more organisations want to create a platform in the…