[Assam] Guwahati: Time to reclaim the city streets for ?foot people?

baruah at bard.edu baruah at bard.edu
Thu Mar 26 00:17:27 PDT 2009


http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090326/jsp/guwahati/story_10719959.jsp

Telegraph (Guwahati) March 26, 2009

Guest Column

Time to reclaim the city streets for ?foot people?

Sanjib Baruah

Crossing the street has become a nightmare in many busy parts of  
Guwahati today. For the old and the infirm, it is well nigh  
impossible. Sometimes it seems as if the ?car people? are at war with  
the ?foot people.? Even the simplest of daily chores is fraught with  
danger.

Travelling back and forth between Guwahati and New York, I am struck  
by how cities in India and those in richer countries are on two  
completely different tracks. Just as Guwahati ? like many other Indian  
cities ? becomes increasingly unfriendly to pedestrians and to those  
using non-motorised modes of transport, one sees the opposite trends  
in many Western cities.

Just the other day, New York?s mayor announced that two of the most  
heavily congested stretches of Broadway ? one of the city?s main  
thoroughfares ? would soon be turned into a car-free, pedestrian  
space. Vehicles will no longer be allowed on what is probably  
Manhattan?s busiest stretch, full of shops and theatres. The mayor?s  
plan, as the New York Times puts it, is a move ?to change the way the  
city thinks of its streets, making them more friendly to pedestrians  
and cyclists and chipping away at the dominance of the automobile.?

For Guwahati?s pedestrians and bicyclists, the outlook does not look  
good. According to a 2007 study by the London-based International  
Institute for Environment and Development, Guwahati is one the world?s  
100 fastest-growing cities. That study relied on data from the second  
half of the last century. Things have only accelerated since then and  
we have seen the rapid increase in the number of automobiles on the  
streets of Guwahati in recent years.

A few years ago, flyovers and wider roads seemed like a solution. By  
now it is clear that they can provide only temporary relief. Many now  
hope that an underground metro system, like that in Delhi and  
Calcutta, would some day alleviate matters. But that is unlikely.

Those who think of the metro systems of New York, Paris or London as  
models, says urban transportation expert Dinesh Mohan, do it out of  
context. The settlement patterns of those cities are radically  
different from Indian cities. The central business districts for  
instance, are very large and dense; and a large number of people have  
to come to the city centre to work. This pattern of living and working  
is unlike that in modern Indian cities, where multiple and widely  
scattered business centres have developed. Such settlement patterns  
cannot support a high-capacity metro system. It is not surprising,  
therefore, that both the Calcutta and Delhi metros are carrying a much  
smaller percentage of passengers than originally projected, making  
them extremely expensive in terms of public subsidy.

There are substantial health benefits to making streets friendlier to  
pedestrians and non-motorised modes of transport. Among industrialised  
countries, those that encourage high levels of ?active transportation?  
? that is where walking, bicycling and public transit account for high  
numbers of daily trips ? have low obesity rates. When transportation  
systems discourage cycling and walking, the population gets less  
healthy.

There are solid environmental arguments as well for reducing our  
reliance on motorised transportation. After all, automobiles are a  
major contributor to greenhouse gases.

How can the transportation trends in our cities be reversed? Recent  
statements on national transportation policy reflect a desire to bring  
about important changes. The Centre now requires that requests for  
funds for urban transportation projects ? for flyovers, road-widening  
or mass rapid transit system ? have to be accompanied by comprehensive  
mobility plans. Pedestrians, non-motorised and public transportation  
are supposed to receive priority. There is also growing agreement  
among experts that modern bus rapid transit systems with dedicated bus  
lanes that make full use of information technology are more cost  
effective and sustainable than underground metro systems.

But historically, technocratic solutions have not been enough to make  
cities more liveable. Champions and advocates of alternative transport  
solutions, and activists and visionaries who care for a city?s quality  
of life have been equally important.
For instance, knowledgeable New Yorkers attribute a lot of the good  
things about the city?s present quality of life, to policies and  
practices regarding its roads and zoning laws, to urban activist and  
thinker Jane Jacobs. I owe the phrases ?foot people? and ?car people?  
to her. In explaining the enduring influence of her 1961 book The  
Death and Life of Great American Cities, she said three decades later  
that her book had ?collaborated with foot people by giving legitimacy  
to what they already knew for themselves.? Experts by contrast, ?did  
not respect what foot people knew and valued.?

Whether or not Guwahati becomes more liveable will depend to a great  
extent on its citizens. Our technocrats, bureaucrats and politicians  
cannot make this happen on their own, not even with the help of the  
fanciest of foreign consulting firms that they are turning to. We need  
urban activists and visionaries to fight for the rights of pedestrians  
and bicyclists, to demand and promote the use of public  
transportation, car-free zones, and a whole lot more.

We must reclaim our city streets as social space, and not let them  
become sterile spaces of mobility.

Sanjib Baruah is professor at Bard College, New York and the Centre  
for Policy Research, New Delhi.






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