http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/14/world/asia/14mumbai.html?_r=1&ref=asia
July 14, 2009
MUMBAI JOURNAL
As Mumbai Spills Over, Floodwater Creeps CloserBy VIKAS
BAJAJ<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/vikas_bajaj/index.html?inline=nyt-per>

MUMBAI, India — As this city prepared recently to inaugurate a shiny new
bridge that officials promise will ease Mumbai’s chronic traffic jams, Dilip
da Cunha was peering at the underbelly of the city’s waterways and drainage
systems.

Taking two visitors on a tour of the busy causeway where the city’s befouled
Mithi River meets the Arabian Sea near the new bridge, the Bandra-Worli Sea
Link <http://bandraworlisealink.com/>, he pointed out a small clump of trees
nearby under which several men were defecating.

The trees represented one of the last remaining species of the
mangroves<http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/02/mangroves/warne-text>
that
once dominated the ecology of Mumbai, India’s financial capital and its most
populous city. Over the decades, most of the wetlands of the Mithi River
estuary that were home to such trees have given way to highways, slums,
office buildings and apartment towers.

While the mangroves’ retreat has provided valuable acreage for Mumbai’s
growth, Mr. da Cunha, who is one half of a husband-and-wife team that
recently finished an exhaustive study of the city’s landscape, said their
disappearance, along with the degradation of the city’s waterways, has made
the city increasingly vulnerable to flooding during the monsoons.

“At some point there were many species of mangroves here, and they must have
made this a fantastic wetland,” he said. “We have reduced these mangroves to
almost a single species that have survived with the bad waters, the sewage
that is around.”

In the summer of 2005, a few weeks before Hurricane
Katrina<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/h/hurricane_katrina/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
devastated
New Orleans and parts of Mississippi, Mumbai received a record 37 inches of
rain in 24 hours during high tide. Approximately 900 people died in those
floods in the city and surrounding areas.

While Mumbai has spent millions on its drainage system since then, last week
an overnight rain about one-tenth as severe as the 2005 downpour brought
traffic and suburban trains in many parts of the city to a crawl during the
morning rush hour.

Inspired by the 2005 floods, Mr. da Cunha and his wife, Anuradha Mathur, who
teach design and landscape architecture at the University of
Pennsylvania<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_pennsylvania/index.html?inline=nyt-org>,
have spent the last two and a half years studying Mumbai and its uneasy
relationship with water. They recently released their findings and 12
proposals for making the city more resilient to floods in the form of a museum
exhibit <http://www.soak.in/> and a book <http://www.soak.in/book.html>,
both titled “Soak: Mumbai in an Estuary.”

They have documented the current state of the city’s waterways and mangroves
and collected a trove of historical maps, images and documents dating back
hundreds of years. They previously did similar, though less comprehensive,
work on the Mississippi River and Bangalore.

Their findings show that a series of natural features like mangrove swamps
and interconnected creeks once protected and shaped Mumbai, just as the
bygone swamps of the Mississippi River delta once protected New Orleans. But
those defenses were weakened over the years, dating to the days of British
rule, as swamps were filled in, land was reclaimed from the sea and creeks
were narrowed or diverted.

The historical maps and documents show little appreciation for those
long-lost natural features. Most old maps make no mention of swamps, which
were often labeled simply as “badlands.” There are few images of the trees
and plants that made up these areas.

Moreover, boundaries between land and sea were never drawn as they existed
during the monsoon, when the wetlands of the estuary expanded, only as they
stood during the summer or winter. “The monsoon was seen as foul weather,”
Ms. Mathur said. And “all of the planning is based on fair weather maps.”

Ms. Mathur and Mr. da Cunha, who both grew up in India but met in San
Francisco, said they set out on their work in part to provide an alternative
interpretation of Mumbai — to have it be recast as an estuary where salt and
fresh water coexist rather than as an island that has to be protected from
the water.

“We are sort of trying to find ways to visualize these complex landscapes,”
Mr. da Cunha said.

Yet they also seem realistic and do not advocate returning the city to an
earlier, more idyllic landscape. They propose a series of projects that,
they say, would alter and tilt the landscape in ways that could reduce or
contain flooding during the monsoon without displacing its vibrant
population and commerce.

For instance, they advocate that maidans, or empty fields, often used as
playgrounds or fairgrounds should be redesigned so they can hold flood
waters during storms and connect streams to one another. They also recommend
creating more passages to the sea for the Mithi River, which currently has
only one outlet. Another proposal recommends creating and widening ditches
that could serve as green belts in fair weather but would carry rainwater
and surging saltwater from the sea in the west to outlets in the east.

Ms. Mathur, Mr. da Cunha and partners like the Asia
Society<http://www.asiasociety.org/> have
been able to enlist the help of powerful and influential backers for their
work. One of them, the chief minister of Maharashtra State, of which Mumbai
is the capital, spoke at the public opening of their exhibit and made the
prestigious National Gallery of Modern Art <http://ngmaindia.gov.in/> available
to house their work.

But it is unclear how much weight officials will give to their ideas, which
are a world apart from city and state plans to use more traditional flood
control approaches like pumping stations and river dredging. The chief
minister, Ashok Chavan, who exerts significant control over the local
government, praised the exhibit as educational but did not speak about any
of its proposals.

Still, Ms. Mathur and Mr. da Cunha are hopeful that their ideas will have
some lasting impact. Members of a wealthy family recently asked how they
could help. They plan to ask the patron to provide the prize money for a
competition in which engineers would design prototypes of one their
proposals: toilet barges for the poor who live near the water. The barges
would be equipped with technology to treat the sewage and perhaps turn it
into energy.

Ms. Mathur said the barges could even dock under the new Bandra-Worli bridge
when they are full and treating their cargo.

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