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Master Plan

Workshop on draft master plan

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The New Indian Express                27.05.2013

Workshop on draft master plan

A one-day workshop to discuss the draft master plan for the capital will be held at Kanakakkunnu Palace Hall here on Tuesday from 10 am. The master plan was published on March 19 this year and the City Corporation had released the notification on April 8. The 60 days allocated as per the Town Plan Act to compile the suggestions and complaints is getting over by June 6.

 According to the master plan, to be realised by 2031, the city gets divided into four zones, namely city core, central city, outer city and city periphery. In the first zone, priority is given for public and semi-public use, followed by commercial development and residential development in the second and third places.

 The central city is considered as the area suitable for the extension of the commercial area in the core, taking into account the comparatively low population density and built-up intensity. Hence, developments under public and semi-public, commercial and residential sectors will get equal priority.

 The availability of vacant land in the outer city can be expected to cater to the future residential demand of the city. The periphery area comprising dry agriculture will be retained as it is.

The master plan aims to enrich the greenery of the city. Seven parks are suggested, in addition to the existing ones. A traffic network to avoid the traffic congestion in the city centre is included. By relocating the Central Jail at Poojappura to Chenkottukonam, the plan is to maintain the jail at Poojappura as a heritage structure.

 Protecting the natural drainage arrangements - Karamana and Killi rivers, Pattom, Ulloor and Amayizhanjan canals and Akkulam, Parvathy Puthanar and Vellayani lakes; green zone; green belt; and water retention areas in the low-lying areas are among the suggestions. When some areas in the green zone of the previous master plan are suggested for other developments, it is directed that planned drainage facilities must be set up for its implementation. When land is given for development through this land-pooling scheme, 10 per cent will be set aside for financially backward families.

 Two city centres at Kazhakkoottam and Vizhinjam are envisaged. There is a suggestion for the development of Medical College by shifting the Regional Cancer Centre and Sri Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology to Chenkottukonam.

 In the Kazhakkoottam-Chenkottukonam region, a Court Complex to include a High Court bench in future is planned. Bringing together road, rail, air and waterways is planned for a mobility hub in Akkulam. Considering the development associated with the Vizhinjam port, a logistic centre is planned there.

 By processing a good portion of the organic waste generated at the source-level itself, a recommendation is there to process it at community-level in the markets. Facilities to process non-biodegradable and e-waste are also proposed.

 Tuesday’s workshop will be inaugurated by Urban Affairs Minister Manjalamkuzhi Ali. Mayor K Chandrika will preside over. Union Minister of State for Human Resource Development Shashi Tharoor, Health Minister V S Sivakumar and MLAs V Sivankutty, K Muraleedharan, Jameela Prakasam and M A Vahid will be present. People’s representatives, engineers, builders, architects, traders, industrialists, representatives of various organisations and experts are invited.

Land Use

* The proposed land use falls under three major heads and they are further divided into sub-categories:

* Built-up zone: Expecting built-up development.

* Green zones: Conserved from the environment point of view; not meant for extensive built-up development.

* Special zones: For specific development projects.

 

Master plan to make proper use of river waters likely

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The Hindu                 24.05.2013

Master plan to make proper use of river waters likely

Special Correspondent

Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister T.B. Jayachandra on Thursday said that the government is mulling formulating a master plan to utilise properly the State’s share of water in various rivers.

Addressing a news conference here,  he said that the proposed master plan would include river waters allotted to the State and use of water for irrigation and drinking purposes.

The State has been allocated 23 tmcft of water in the Godavari and that water is yet to be utilised. 

The government would in two months decide whether to engage new advocates in the Supreme Court in connection with various river waters dispute.

The Opposition parties would be taken into confidence as far as disputes over sharing of the Cauvery, the Krishna and the Godavari waters is concerned, he said.

Public prosecutors

He said that 60 public prosecutors were working in the State and the performance of many of them was not up to the mark. A major change was required and new professionals would be appointed.

 

Kochi master plan in cold storage

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The Hindu              22.05.2013

Kochi master plan in cold storage

Laying the foundation:The efforts of the Kochi Corporation to draw up the document began during the term of C.M. Dinesh Mani as the Mayor of Kochi. In this 2005 photograph, Mr. Mani (extreme right) is seen at a stakeholders meeting to discuss the master plan.— File Photo
Laying the foundation:The efforts of the Kochi Corporation to draw up the document began during the term of C.M. Dinesh Mani as the Mayor of Kochi. In this 2005 photograph, Mr. Mani (extreme right) is seen at a stakeholders meeting to discuss the master plan.— File Photo

The notification of the master plan for the Kochi Corporation and 16 other adjoining local bodies has been stalled for nearly two years.

While the local bodies have accused the State government of sitting on the draft notification, Manjalamkuzhi Ali, the Minister for Urban Affairs, has charged the local bodies of failing to send the vision document to the State government for approval.

The master plan is the key vision document for a local body to define its course of development for at least the coming three decades. The efforts of the Kochi Corporation to draw up the document began during the term of C.M. Dinesh Mani as the Mayor of Kochi.

Later, the Town and Country Planning department took up the initiative. They drew up a document for the 17 local bodies in the region, which came under the Cochin Urban Agglomeration.

Besides the corporation, the agglomeration included five municipalities including Tripunithura, Maradu, Thrikkakara, Eloor and Kalamassery, and 11 panchayats. It also covered an area of nearly 370 sq km.

According to Tony Chammany, Kochi Mayor, some of the local bodies in the urban agglomerate had suggested changes to the land use plans in the draft document.

The local bodies had raised the issue at a meeting of the Joint Town Planning Committee, which was chaired by the Kochi Mayor some time back.

Rejecting the government stand that the local bodies had not forwarded the document, senior functionaries of the department and some local body chiefs maintained that the draft document and the suggestions of the local bodies concerned were delivered to the government. The documents were despatched through the office of the Chief Town Planner, they said.

Highlighting the need for a master plan, urban planning experts pointed out that fixing the land use patterns in the plan area would go a long way in the successful implementation of various projects.

The Cochin urban agglomerate was classified into 12 zones and land use patterns were suggested for each zone. The development of Sahodaran Ayyappan and Kaloor-Kathrikadavu roads were possible in the city as the urban planners had earlier envisaged these projects and land use patterns in the adjoining areas were fixed for enabling the development of the roads, they said.

Responding to the issue, Mr. Ali said the Joint Town Planning Committee should forward the draft notification including the amendments to the government.

Formalities like publishing the notifications for eliciting the views of the general public had to be followed, he said.

 


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