All

The mail below, failed to get to the list. Hence pasting it below.
Regards
Harish Kotian
Quoting:

Hindu newspaper: August 11, 2014

RANA SIDDIQUI ZAMAN

Often lead them to manholes, dead-ends; make them bang into trees, walls
A pedestrian area built with tactile tiles to guide the movement of the 
visually-impaired.
Tactile tiles, which are virtually the guiding lights for the 
visually-impaired, are hardly of any use to them in the Capital. Sometimes they 
end up leading into drains, as outside the power station adjoining Delhi 
Secretariat; at other places they lead into obstacles like trees, poles or even 
a wall. This is so because while placing them is mandated under the civic and 
building guidelines, the sensitivity needed for such work is missing.
The Delhi Metro was the first to use them effectively in its premises, for 
leading the visually-impaired right from the station entry to the train coach 
and vice-versa. At its stations too, the tiles are now serving little purpose. 
Elsewhere, the situation is worse.
As mandated, the civic bodies began placing them on sidewalks in a big way in 
the run up to the Commonwealth Games. The approach being half-hearted, the 
result is catastrophic. Largely, these tiles either lead nowhere, or follow 
till a dead end, a tree, or even into an open manhole. Else they just end 
midway, are broken or encroached in between, creating further confusion for the 
visually-impaired.
Ignorance and indiscipline
To top it is people's ignorance and civil indiscipline. Barely do people know 
that the blocks with straight lines are guiding blocks to give a smooth and 
hurdle-free accessibility to the visually-impaired and blocks with circular 
dots are warning blocks indicating the end of the destination, level 
difference, hurdle or change of direction, etc. Notably, those who install the 
tiles also do not know what they are for, and take them to be decorative pieces.
Further apathy can be gauged from the fact that the Delhi Transport Corporation 
buses do not stop where tactile tiles lead to the bus entry doors. Often, tile 
arrangements on metro stations also don't hail the signs that could indicate 
where a particular line of tactile is leading to - platform or ticket counter, 
any check points or lifts. Same is the case for BRT corridors and roads which 
lack any indicators for the visually-impaired.
George Abraham is the Chief Executive Officer of Score Foundation, a non-profit 
organisation known for launching Project Eyeway as a single-stop knowledge 
resource for people living with blindness and low vision in 2002. He says: 
"There are three major issues associated with tactile tiles on railway 
stations, bus stops and BRT corridors - disorganised planning, ignorance, and 
indiscipline. The tiles could be placed strategically for better accessibility 
with standardised texture and symbols for the visually-impaired. This should 
have been in the context of the entire city, not only the metro, buses or BRT 
corridors."
Mr. Abraham shares that he had recently created a special focus group which 
spoke to numerous visually-impaired people in the Capital who use these 
vehicles or walk on the road. "The findings are shocking. Some narrated that 
they fell off the metro track, some into open gutters, and some had hit their 
head against a tree, a wall or stood stranded against a dead-end leading 
nowhere. A colleague of mine who is blind and his wife partially-blind, fell 
into a gutter together in a market and had to undergo a long-drawn treatment. 
On the BRT Corridor near Moolchand, people park their car on the footpath. The 
visually-impaired following the tactiles have often banged into the cars. On 
the road from Moolchand to Greater Kailash, the tiles end midway. Such 
instances are not rare but regular," he says.
Solution
A three-dimensional letter board at a reachable-touchable position at certain 
distances could be installed, feeling which a visually-impaired person could 
locate his/her destination and further turns. Footpaths need to be on regular 
heights like in foreign nations (example the US) where they are uniformly 
ramped. A colour and sign board orientation and an awareness campaign for the 
civil society are also needed.
Though the Delhi Metro makes a conscious effort to place the tactiles properly, 
DTC PRO Ravinder Minhas reasons that this area comes under Delhi Tourism and 
Transport Development Corporation and DTC has no role in that. "Till 2012, we 
used to work with NGO Samarthayam (which works towards creating barrier-free 
environment) but after that it went under DTTDC," he says.
But there is some hope. Score Foundation shared a presentation on the subject 
with DMRC, School of Planning and Architecture as well as Delhi's Urban 
Development Department a week ago. "While DTC and MCD are not only ignorant but 
also unconcerned, Delhi Metro has been receptive," concludes Mr. Abraham.
link: 
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/tactile-tiles-of-little-use-to-visuallyimpaired/article6302468.ece




Best regards,


Shabina Bano
Research Officer
Score Foundation
17/107, Basement, Vikram Vihar, Lajpatnagar 4, New Delhi 110024, INDIA.
Helpdesk:+91 - 11 - 460 70 380 (Monday to Friday 10am to 5pm)
Office Phone: +91 - 11 - 26472582/81
Email: [email protected]
Websites: scorefoundation.org.in
               www.eyeway.org




________________________________
Caution: The Reserve Bank of India never sends mails, smses or makes calls 
asking for personal information such as your bank account details, passwords, 
etc. It never keeps or offers funds to anyone. Please do not respond in any 
manner to such offers, however official or attractive they may look.

Notice: This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and 
intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are 
addressed. If you are not the intended recipient, any dissemination, use, 
review, distribution, printing or copying of the information contained in this 
e-mail message and/or attachments to it are strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this email by error, please notify us by return e-mail or telephone 
and immediately and permanently delete the message and any attachments. The 
recipient should check this email and any attachments for the presence of 
viruses. The Reserve Bank of India accepts no liability for any damage caused 
by any virus transmitted by this email.


Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of 
mobile phones / Tabs on:
http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to