Many
expansive walkways along the backwaters in Kochi like the approximately two-km
long walkway maintained by Cochin Port Authority (CPA) in the southern side of
the Kundannur Bridge-Mattancherry BOT Bridge stretch in Willingdon Island, are
in dire need of upkeep.
Urban planners and votaries for more open spaces
and green lungs in Kochi have over the years been expressing concern at such
dwindling spaces in the city and its suburbs for families and others to take a
stroll or to unwind.
The president of Kerala Nature
Protection Council, C M Joy, said Kochi is among the few cities in the country
that are bearing the brunt of unplanned development and fast-shrinking open
spaces. “It is in such a grim situation that agencies that own and maintain
walkways and promenades ought to ensure that the existing ones are maintained
well. Steps must also be taken to
increase their number and to plant trees on them, since Kochi is uniquely
blessed with backwaters and other waterbodies on all sides, where there is
immense potential for such spaces to take a stroll. This must be done in a
planned manner and in proportion to the number of people residing here.”
Sadly, many walkways and most
footpaths in the city are not maintained well, necessitating renovation every
few years. This in turn gives rise to corruption and subsequent wastage of
public funds. Policy makers and others must take note of the fact that people
need vast and green open spaces to get their doze of fresh air and exercise, to
stay healthy and fit. Steps must also be taken to plant mangroves, since tens
of thousands of such plants that covered the waterfront were mercilessly
destroyed, under the guise of development projects. This lopsided development is not good and a master plan must be readied
in order to ensure well-maintained open spaces, he added.
The long-term sustainability
and prosperity of any city is to a large extent determined by the quantity and
quality of pedestrian and bicycling spaces, since they are crucial for the
overall wellness of the city in terms of health, economy and less emissions… Kochi is uniquely blessed with
coastal-regulation zone (CRZ)-affected areas beside water bodies that can be
converted to pedestrian spaces/walkways, she said and referred to how the GCDA
had in 2017-’18 proposed to the State Government a 6.5-km long pedestrian
space/walkway from the Kaniampuzha riverside at Vyttila Mobility Hub up to
Infopark, which is yet to be sanctioned. As a beneficiary of Smart Cities
and Amruth Cities programme, such projects must be prioritised, Ms Mathew
added.
Stating that the overgrowth of
weeds on either side of its walkway in Willingdon Island was a cause for
concern, sources in Cochin Port
Authority said that a new contractor has been shortlisted to preen up the
entire stretch and to do necessary maintenance works.