Category Archives: Skywalk

Taming street-people: India’s grand civilizational project

A status message by a friend on Facebook has had me thinking for many weeks now. He wrote: Ranchi is an amazing city. In my first 30 minutes there, two schoolchildren, one bike rider and a goat tried to kill … Continue reading

Posted in Car-free streets, Equity in Planning, Indian National Movement, Mumbai, Planning History, Ranchi, Safety, Skywalk, social spaces, Street Vendors, Suburban Rail | Tagged , , | 13 Comments

Vendors are the security, can’t you see?

Street vendors and homeless persons should be welcome on streets – between the two groups, they occupy the streets at all times of the day and night, providing stray walkers at night the security of not having to worry about being the only person on the street. And yet, we find that governments respond to their presence in exactly the opposite manner – Mumbai wants to get security to keep people from “encroaching” the elevated walkways when they could have gotten these “encroachers” to themselves serve as security – at so much less expense and freeing up so much time of the already overworked Mumbai Police. Continue reading

Posted in Bangalore, homeless persons, Mumbai, Needs of the poor, Pedestrian Needs, security, Skywalk, Street Vendors | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

What’s Mumbai been upto?

The past month seems to have been a busy month for transportation planners in Mumbai. Here’s a quick round up of what’s going on (with only limited commentary on my part). Continue reading

Posted in Airport, Environmental Assessment, Metro, Mumbai, Navi Mumbai, Park-n-ride, Sea-links, Skywalk, Suburban Rail, Transportation Planning, Water Transport | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Creating Streets for Hawkers and Walkers

Mumbai’s planners do not necessarily view skywalks as a solution for improved safety, but rather, increased pedestrian flow. The idea is to move pedestrians up and away, making room for everyone else down below, including motorists and illegal street vendors who encroach on footpaths. But to pit walkers against hawkers is to ignore the real problem. A real solution would preserve the vibrancy of Mumbai’s street-level marketplaces. Most importantly, it would be about getting pedestrians to their destinations, not about getting pedestrians off the roads so that motorists have a free pass. Continue reading

Posted in Car-free streets, Mumbai, Needs Assessment, Pedestrian Needs, Safety, Skywalk, Street Vendors, Transportation Planning | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments