Mumbai adalah ibukota bisnis/perdagangan, sedang New
Delhi adalah ibukota pemerintahan.  Mumbai (dan negara
bagian Maharashtra) menyumbang 35% GDP nasional. 
Hampir semua konglomerat, kecuali Azim Premji dan
Narayana Murthi, menetap di kota ini. Tak heran jutaan
orang dari sekitar mencari penghasilan di siang hari
di kota ini.  Mereka keluar masuk Mumbai dengan kereta
api listrik berjalur 2 atau 4, yang tiap 2 menit
lewat.  Kereta api listrik dan bus kota BEST terus
mondar mandir siang dan malam, baru berhanti jam 02:00
pagi dan jalan lagi jam 04:00 pagi.  Stasiun pusat
K.A., Victoria Terminus, tiap hari melayani 3 juta
penumpang.

Kota ini tidak dapat dimekarkan, karena merupakan
pulau. Pemekarannya tidak bisa lain selain keatas,
berupa gedung bertingkat. Karena langkanya ruang,
harga properti melambung sangat tinggi, jauh lebih
tinggi dari harga di New Delhi.

Menyadari keadaan ini, tahun lalu diluncurkan proyek
Mumbai First berjangka 10 tahun dengan biaya 10
milyard dollar.  Yang dijadikan benchmark adalah
Shanghai.  Pembangunan Worli Sea-Link yaitu jembatan
yang menghubungkan Worli dengan seberang teluk sudah
setengah selesai.  Kurang jelas, pengerahan dana dari
masyarakat berhasil atau tidak, karena anggaran pemda
sudah defisit besar sekali.

Salam,
RM
 

Date:02/11/2004 URL:
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2004/11/02/stories/2004110200361100.htm

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A megalopolis on oxygen 
Vinod Mathew 

There are many who believe that the self-styled
megalopolis carrying the tag of Mumbai, if it
continues to load its infrastructure along the present
lines, is on its death throes.  





 
Crowding into Mumbai. � Paul Noronha 

LAST week saw the Bombay High Court get proactive on
haphazard realty development in the already heavily
`built-up' south Mumbai island. Its first order on
Monday restrained the Maharashtra Government from
permitting reconstruction of pre-1940 buildings,
unless declared unsafe by the authorities, that too
with an FSI (floor space index) not exceeding 2.5. 

If that was a setback to real estate developers who
were systematically ensuring the influx of more
office-goers into the already overpopulated south
Mumbai island, the second order on Friday invoked the
Coastal Regulation Zone and prohibited sea-front
construction, that too of a State government building.
The two back-to-back orders are expected to have a
long-term impact on the way India's business capital
is developing, without giving any thought to its
back-up infrastructure. In the short term, however, it
is up to some of the smart thinking business houses
that are liquidating their expensive land holdings in
south Mumbai and moving out to larger spaces in the
suburbs. 

The private initiative comes in sharp contrast to the
State government's marked reluctance to shift out some
of its offices out of the island and reduce the
quantum of office-goers from the city side. 

Sacrilegious as it may sound to some, there are many
who believe that the self-styled megalopolis carrying
the tag of Mumbai, if it continues to load its
infrastructure along the present lines, is on its
death throes. 

As the doomsday theorists find purists jostling for
space with new kids on the block, the mystic religion
called `living in Mumbai' has its rite de passage
played out in the form of the daily penance of
travelling by the suburban train. 

Some of those worried by the `Dying City Syndrome'
include the Shiv Sena supremo, Mr Bal Thackeray,
according to whom the infrastructure of the city is
overloaded beyond acceptable limits. While he is
somewhat selective about who should leave in order to
take the city off artificial respiration, there are
others who write entire books on the mixed bag called
Bombay. 

In Maximum City: Bombay Lost And Found, author Suketu
Mehta rejects the notion that the city is on its last
legs. His rationale: When 500 new people come in
everyday to live, Bombay is certainly not a dying
city. Those who live in Mumbai may have reason to
disagree with the US-based Mr Mehta. According to
them, it is precisely the spectre of over 500
additional people landing the city each day, with no
corresponding growth in infrastructure that gives
nightmares to those who have a long-term stake in the
city. 

Arguably, a high percentage of fresh faces find their
way to the ubiquitous chawls, thus ensuring that the
commercial and financial side of India's business
capital remains a marginal issue in the larger scheme
of things. 

But there is no denying that it is the business
managers, software professionals, stock market
punters, traders and, of late, the call-centre
professionals who keep the city wheels moving. 

And barring the last category, one finds that almost
all the others are headed towards business side of
Mumbai in the morning, only to return to their
suburban residences late in the evening. It is a
unidirectional flow of traffic � southwards in the
morning and towards north in the evening. 

The fanciful cures suggested have included a
differential tariff on the city 's infrastructure that
ensures a more even load on weekdays. As in the
varying tariff levels that are charged in the energy
sector in some countries to ease the pressure on peak
load factor. 

On the practical side, there have been plans to build
sea-linking bridges and ply hovercrafts from mainland
to the island, all these coming to nought as if by
design. 

True, crowded business capitals � London, New York and
Paris � have their share of problems that , render
road movement a painful experience. But, as a
redeeming feature, they also have a decent public
utility not bursting at its seams. 

Even cities such as Delhi have put in place their
version of a mass rapid transport system. But Mumbai
seems content with its suburban train service to
facilitate the throughput of human traffic. By keeping
fares abnormally subsidised on this mode of travel,
the powers-that-be have ensured the status quo on
prime property in south Mumbai. 

Successive governments have turned a blind eye to the
demands that an example be set by shifting out some of
the more populous establishments out of this part of
the city. 

Perhaps a beginning can be made by moving out, say,
the Mantralaya, the Bombay Stock Exchange and the
Bombay High Court. The rest would follow. 

Clearly, there is still hope as business houses have
begun seeing virtue in liquidating their landholdings
in the pricey part of Mumbai in favour of larger
spaces in the suburbs. If this trend finds acceptance
among more corporate entities, then one may actually
get to see multi-directional flow of traffic. 

For the wannabe Shanghai, with a population density in
excess of 19,000 residents per sq km, this could be
the preferred solution rather than more vertical
structures virtually tilting the island city into
premature extinction. 









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