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Mobility Sense Nonsense A STREETCAR NAMED VISION More room for automobiles does not make roads more mobile. Abhijit Sarkar(abhijit.sircus2003@gmail.com) tries to find an efficient way to move a city’s people “The important questions are not about engineering but about ways to live...The technical aspects are relatively simple. The difficult decisions relate to who is going to benefit from the models adopted. Do we dare to create a transport system giving priority to the needs of the poor majority rather than the automobile owning minority? Are we trying to find the most efficient, economical way to move a city’s population, as cleanly and as comfortably as possible? Or are we just trying to minimize the upper class’s traffic jams?” — Enrique Penalosa, mayor of Bogota, Colombia. Interestingly, irrespective of the means of travel, everyone has to be a pedestrian; at least for some distance. This bother won’t perish till automobiles drive right up to department store shelves and executive desks. But pedestrian convenience and safety are routinely ignored in designing and making of road infrastructure. This affects not only the life, limb and dignity of pedestrians but everyone’s, especially the numerical majority’s, mobility and access and even the very movement of traffic that road-augmentation is intended to ease. This unintended consequence and a concern for increasing PCU-throughput — admittedly genuine, from its own point of view, like all concerns — cause a rising spiral of footpath-cutting, flyovers, footbridges, underground crosswalks. The utility-ruining dereservation of Calcutta’s tramtracks is an initiative that promises to turn the relatively low-risk act of crossing roads into adventure sport. Since accident-risk and ability-demanding means like footbridges (including escalators) and underground crosswalks inhibit the risk-averse and the suboptimally-abled, they also curb walk-trips and independent social, recreational, educational or shopping visits. Chores expand to envelop relationships more than they need to. Social interaction declines. Time gets thieved without any compensatory time being added to the 24-hour day. Speed-hunger aggravates. Speed-gains — more apparent than real and far less per traveller than is believed by policy-makers — translate into travel-time earnings of a small but very visible minority. Time-gains of the well-wheeled are spent to buy increasing distances between work, home, friends and other attachments. Vehicle-miles travelled increase, as do fuel-sales, pollution, GDP, dissatisfaction, road-rage and general per capita. But no net credit on the travel-time ledger. Our metropolises have very high levels of public transport use and cheek-by-jowl inhabitation, which urban United States of America, Australia or Europe lack. What we have are assets. They should not be misconstrued as liabilities but used towards a far better quality of urban life. It is being increasingly appreciated worldwide — urban-sprawled, automobile-dependent, oil-guzzling US included — that traffic jams are a car too many, not scarcity of roads. The Federal Transport Administration now encourages US cities to adopt bus rapid transit — buses in reserved, priority lanes of metropolitan roads — for overcoming automobile dependence and traffic. As for the litany of how Asia and the Americas are worlds apart and Indian realities are unique (to the point of being extra-global), it would be useful to note that space reallocation for public transit and human access is a growing phenomenon over diverse urban situations across continents. BRT in Taipei (Taiwan), Kunming (China) and impossible-seeming Jakarta (Indonesia) are some Asian instances. Delhi is reported to be in an advanced stage. |
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Issue Date: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 |
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Between the canny and the uncanny - Abhijit Sarkar Between the canny and uncanny Lie the feet One art and the other mystery They look similar things Of pretended antonyms.
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