Metro route to airport needs surveys, not just opinions

Metro has sought public input on which of the different lines – existing as well as proposed – should be extended to the airport. I’m sure many people will give their input, but there are two other aspects to look at.

(1) We should conduct extensive surveys – ongoing – at the airport to always know where people are going to when they arrive, and where they are coming from to the airport. We don’t need to collect anything other than the names of the neighbourhoods where trips originate and end. A map of this, updated every few months, will provide a lot of useful guidance for Metro planning.

(2) Urban development along Metro corridors has to be tied more deeply to the construction of the Metro itself. At the moment, this is not done. There have been some small steps, like increasing the FSI for places close to station, but those are not significant enough. There must be, for each station, a station-area plan that looks at mobility, amenities, building permits, and a lot more together. BDA is actually supposed to make 47 town planning schemes for different parts of the city, but in its history of planning, it has never done this.

As for the airport connectivity itself, we need a separate exercise – with Metro participation, but not exclusively done by Metro – to decide what the long term strategy for air connectivity is. Is Metro the right mode now? In the future? Should we plan to have a second airport? if yes, where? Should we think of the airport(s) as regional services, or specific to Bengaluru city? If the latter, what’s the connectivity plan for the rest of the region?

The answers to questions of this larger canvas should be established first, before we begin to act on specific initiatives.

***********

The slow speed at which we establish infrastructure has itself become a source of contention about projects. It is bad enough that some un-necessary things are done, but even those are done so poorly and so slowly that the public’s patience with this kind of development is wearing thin.

Tardiness in projects has a real price. Not only do project costs themselves go up, they have high externalities. All the assumptions about the benefits of a project become at-risk, and have to be re-addressed.

Earlier this year, there was talk of establishing a National Organisation for Rapid Infrastructure, which would focus on bringing speed to the public works construction industry. I thought we should have its headquarters in Bengaluru, and maybe even the first few examples of what the institution can do.

I’m still hopeful that something like this will happen. Paradoxically – or perhaps, predictably – even an institution for making something ‘rapid’ has to move like a snail through the process of being set up.

Leave a Reply

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

Similar Story

Bengaluru’s poor public transport utilisation needs urgent attention: B.PAC survey

Bengaluru took the top spot this year as the world’s most congested city with commuters expecting to spend an average of 71 per cent extra travel time stuck in traffic. According to the survey conducted by B.PAC, 33 % of the survey respondents said that they do not use public transport in Bengaluru becauseof lack of frequency. First and Last Mile Connectivity to Public Transport in Bengaluru

The city with a population of over 12 million has nearly 8 million vehicles on road as of 2020. The draft revised Master Plan for Bengaluru – 2031 states that the modal share of public transport in total overall trips is only 48% as against 82 % for Mumbai.A city such as Bengaluru which has only 42 Kms of Metro serviced  that too for limited locations and a negligible suburban rail service, an efficient bus transport system is the only most significant public transport system available in the short and medium term. Since the arrival of metro services in the…

Similar Story

Workshop on Street Vendors Act

The Alternative Law Forum is organising a half day workshop on December 14 between 2.30 PM and 6.30 PM in Bengaluru, on the Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act, 2014 and the Karnataka Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Rules, 2019. Background of the workshop This workshop is being conducted in view of the Town Vending Committees being constituted across the State as per the provisions of the Street Vendors Act, 2014 and the Karnataka Rules 2019, in seven zones of Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (with the exception of Bommanahalli Zone).…