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Plea against collection of parking fee in public buildings

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The Hindu  26.10.2010

Plea against collection of parking fee in public buildings

Special Correspondent


The parking area should not be let out or considered a source of income

Government should take action against such practice


COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Consumer Cause has appealed to the State Government to ensure that parking is permitted in commercial and public buildings without collecting parking charges.

K. Kathirmathiyon, secretary of the consumer organisation, has said in a release that the Department of Town and Country Planning approved building plans after ensuring that adequate parking area was provided in the proposed structures.

There was a growing trend among commercial complexes here to collect parking fee from the consumers who parked the vehicles in the space provided in the complex premises.

A commercial structure in the city was collecting Rs. 10 an hour from vehicle owners who parked their cars in the building premises.

Mr. Kathirmathiyon said that this was “highly irregular and illegal”.

Collecting parking fees in such buildings would discourage the consumers from using the parking space within the premises and they would park on the road sides.

This would defeat the purpose of making parking area mandatory in the buildings.

“The parking area should not be let out or considered a source of income,” he said.

He appealed to the Directorate of Town and Country Planning to make it mandatory that parking fee should not be collected in commercial complexes and public buildings.

Though there were no rules now banning collection of parking fees in these buildings, the State Government should consider the interest of the consumers and the traffic problems and should impose a condition against collection of parking fees while approving the building plan.

The Government should also take action against those buildings where the parking fee was collected, Mr. Kathirmathiyon added.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 October 2010 08:54
 

Need for evolving a hassle-free system for pedestrians

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The Hindu  26.10.2010

Need for evolving a hassle-free system for pedestrians

Ajai Sreevatsan


NEED FOR MORE: A growing city needs a host of facilities to ensure safety of pedestrians. A foot overbridge under construction on the Taluk Office Road in Saidapet.

CHENNAI: The State government recently gave clearance for pedestrian foot overbridges with escalators on seven busy roads across the city. While the project will provide some immediate relief to pedestrians using those roads, the larger issue of greater inclusiveness in urban transport planning remains unaddressed.

Nearly 42 per cent of all road accidents that occur in the city involve pedestrians. According to the Comprehensive Traffic and Transportation Study for the Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA), footpaths are present in only 20 per cent of the roads.

The CTTS says that though walking and cycling account for 34 per cent of all daily trips being undertaken in the city, the facilities for such road users are completely inadequate.

In fact, the modal share of walking has steadily increased over the past three decades because cycling has become near impossible on the city's roads and many cannot afford any other mode of transport.

While the CMA accounts for nearly 1,200-odd km of road network, only about 20 km of roads have 1.5 m wide footpaths. Of the 217 major traffic junctions in the city, only 36 have signals to regulate pedestrian crossing.

“There is absolutely no policy attention to pedestrian facilities in most Indian cities,” says Anumita Roychowdhury, researcher at the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE). “Across Indian cities, between 40 to 45 per cent trips, are below five km. A focus on building car-centric infrastructure is destroying our walkable cities. Also, public transport patronage cannot be increased without providing walking spaces that will act as holding areas to accommodate pedestrians.”

Pedestrian flows in the city in certain locations such as Broadway and at the junction near T.Nagar bus stand is more than 10,000 persons per hour. That is comparable to the peak hour vehicular flow through junctions such as Madhya Kailash.

“Everybody must have equal access to public spaces,” says Shreya Gadepalli, director, Institute of Transportation Policy (Ahmedabad).

“Most Indian cities are going through a phase of addiction to the car, which requires the increase of average vehicle speeds at the expense of safety to other road users. It is similar to what western cities went through in the 1960s and 1970s. Planners must realise that equitability must be a grounding principle for building our cities. We must build our cities for people, not cars,” she adds.

New York recently converted Times Square into a pedestrian plaza. San Francisco has enforced a ‘Better Street Policy' to reduce traffic volumes on the road and to facilitate pedestrian movement. Making cities pedestrian-friendly also has important social dimensions, says Geetam Tiwari, chairperson of the Transportation Research and Injury Prevention Programme at IIT-Delhi. “The percentage of people who walk to work for more than 30 minutes, often in dangerous circumstances, because they cannot afford any form of private transport, has increased,” she adds.

According to her, upcoming public transport projects must think about building integrated pedestrian support systems. Stressing that there is greater appreciation of pedestrian needs, K.Rajaraman, Managing Director, Chennai Metro Rail Ltd., said the rail network, expected to cater to 13 million people, will lay special emphasis on pedestrian access to the stations.

Since most of the stations will be along busy roads, he said dispersing commuters once they get out of the Metro will be a major challenge. “Almost all stations will have traffic integration areas with facilities for bicycle access. Most approach roads will also have properly designed 2 m-wide footpaths,” he added.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 October 2010 08:53
 

Parking meters at nine more locations

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The Hindu       25.10.2010

Parking meters at nine more locations

Staff Reporter
Decision taken at all-party meet held by Corporation
Photo: M. Vedhan

The Purasawalkam High Road is among the nine locations where parking meters are to be installed.

CHENNAI: Chennai Corporation will soon install parking meters at nine more locations. This was decided at an all-party meeting held on Wednesday by the civic body.

Regulation of parking and the possibility of commissioning underground multi-level parking lots in open space reserve lands were also discussed. The locations chosen for the metered on-street parking include stretches of Anna Nagar Third Avenue; Anna Nagar Second Avenue; Purasawalkam High Road; General Patters Road; Sardar Patel Road in Gandhi Nagar; Whites Road in Royapettah; and Shanthi Colony near Sundaram Medical Foundation. At present, North Mada Street, Mylapore; Pondy Bazaar in T.Nagar, and CSIR Road in Taramani have the facilities. A car user can drop a 5-rupee coin into the meter and obtain a permit on which the entry time and vehicle number will be printed.

The parking attendant would verify the permit to be displayed on the dashboard. Parking fee for two hours is Rs.10 and for 3 hours Rs.15.

 

Last Updated on Monday, 25 October 2010 01:18
 


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