------------------------------------------------------------------------
* G * O * A * N * E * T **** C * L * A * S * S * I * F * I * E * D * S *
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Planning to get married in Goa?

www.weddingsetcgoa.com

Making your 'dream wedding' possible

------------------------------------------------------------------------

This article is from the blog res gestae (www.rajivndesai.blogspot.com)
you can reach the person managing the list at i...@comma.in
Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Ahmedabad Journal


The Butterfly City

Late on a moonlit night, Ashish and his wife Nicole, my niece, drove me along 
the 
newly-built embankment on Ahmedabad's Sabarmati River. Flowing north to south, 
the 
river roughly divides the old city with its rich tradition and heritage 
architecture 
and the modern suburban development on its west side. As we drove along the 
river's 
edge, I marveled at the sheer beauty of the waterway in full flow. I lived in 
the 
city for three years in the 1960s and my parents made their home there. So I 
have a 
proprietary hometown interest.

When I lived in Ahmedabad, the Sabarmati held no water. Its banks were 
slum-ridden. 
In the middle, you had these wonderful sights of people drying their colorful 
clothes and donkeys laden with sand to fuel the furious building activity on 
the 
west side of the river. Every now and then, the river would become flooded as 
the 
barrages upstream released water in the monsoon. By and large though, the river 
ran 
dry and the many bridges across it seemed pointless.

All that changed in May 1997. The Sabarmati Riverfront Development Corporation 
was 
set up under the stewardship of then chief minister Shankarsinh Vaghela to 
develop a 
plan for the riverfront. Twelve years later, Vaghela's dream is taking shape. 
The 
river is full now, fed by the water of the Narmada Dam. When the project is 
completed, Ahmedabad will join Goa's capital city Panjim as the only other 
riverside 
city in India to develop its waterfront.

The riverfront development in Ahmedabad is a huge and sophisticated urban 
renewal 
project. When it is complete, it will transform this city that is already fond 
of 
the good life. Traditionally known for its parsimonious ways, Ahmedabad has 
changed 
over the years to become possibly the most global city in India; not because of 
multinational firms as in Gurgaon but mostly because it has a huge connection 
to the 
US, where many of its denizens reside. This least Western city in India is 
curiously 
its most American city.

As such, Ahmedabad is truly egalitarian. On a recent flight from Bombay, I 
bumped 
into my friend Sanjay Lalbhai, scion of the city's illustrious Lalbhai family 
and 
the head of Arvind Mills, traveling with me on an all-cattle-class Jet Konnect 
flight. His family is, among other things, a benefactor of the city's famed 
Indian 
Institute of Management and the renowned CEPT University.

In an India of new and in-your-face wealth, Sanjay remains an icon of 
understated 
old wealth: unassuming and courteous, wedded to larger development causes such 
as 
higher education. He does this not as part of some PR-driven corporate social 
responsibility program; he is convinced, like his forebears, that a 
publicly-traded 
corporation has a duty to the community.

People like Sanjay and a relatively enlightened bureaucracy have transformed 
Ahmedabad from a moffusil place into India's most dynamic city: its new Bus 
Rapid 
Transit System makes its Delhi counterpart look like a third-world system; the 
city's 
airport, roads and its smooth power supply make it closer to global standards 
than 
any other city in India.

Historically, the laughing stock of India's western provinces, Ahmedabad today 
is 
the face of new India. Never mind Bombay, people commended even Surat, Baroda 
and 
Poona over Ahmedabad. But the city will have the last laugh. It is set to 
emerge, 
with its mixture of schlock and exquisite architecture, superb infrastructure 
and 
thriving consumerism, as India's premier city in the 21st century.

This does not mean that Ahmedabad is suddenly a pretty city; far from it. Flat, 
featureless and dusty, it grew privately. Builders from the north transformed 
this 
once genteel city into a treeless monstrosity of ugly multistory buildings. 
Over the 
years, conscientious civic authorities decided to take the city back. So you 
have 
this unusual combination of ugly private buildings, superb public architecture 
and 
now, sophisticated public spaces with a well-designed bus rapid transit 
corridor and 
a cleverly designed ring road with flyovers that work.

The expressway that links Ahmedabad to Baroda is a marvelous piece of road 
engineering that makes the Delhi-Gurgaon highway look like a country road in 
Burkina 
Faso. It runs about 100 kilometers, a distance that can be traversed in 55 
minutes. 
The city's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel airport makes the new terminal in Delhi 
look 
like a provincial airport in some remote African country. The city is abuzz 
with new 
and lasting solutions to urban problems. They have no power cuts, a brand new 
water 
supply and sewerage system and piped cooking gas.

On the other hand, Ahmedabad remains among the most polluted cities in India. 
There 
is no getting away from the ugly commercial and private buildings. Its climate 
has 
to rank among the worst in India, thanks largely to the absence of trees and 
greenery.

Already, though, with water in the river, you can feel the climate is changing 
for 
the better. The vastly improved and well thought out infrastructure is bringing 
pride back to the city. As such, this maggot of a city is about to be 
transformed 
into a butterfly, albeit with ugly wings.


Copyright Rajiv Desai 2009

Posted by Rajiv N Desai at 6:43 PM 2 comments
Labels: ahmedabad, Bus Rapid Transit, gujarat, Sabarmati River, Sardar 
Vallabhbhai 
Patel airport, urban renewal



Reply via email to