Friday, December 7, 2012

to save a two century old milestone in the city

The BMC’s heritage committee has stepped in to save a two century old milestone in the city from being overrun by the Mumbai Monorail project, though why it’s been so poorly ‘preserved’ - hemmed in by rusting fences and camouflaged by the city’s filth - is a question they’re now looking into.

The milestone in question - at NM Joshi Marg, or Delisle Road as it’s still known - is three-ft tall and made of basalt. It is one of the 13 such milestones installed in Mumbai between 1816 and 1837, and marks the distance to St Thomas Cathedral, near Churchgate station, as ‘IV Miles’. Only eight still remain, all in various stages of decay.

The MMRDA, which is the nodal agency for the Mumbai Monorail Project, had sought permission to remove the milestone in October, as it obstructed construction of a pillar being built for the project. However, the Mumbai Heritage Conservation Committee (MHCC), has refused to grant them a No Objection Certificate, asking them instead to temporarily remove the milestone, and put it back at the same spot once their pillar is built.

“Since this is a Grade I structure, it was not possible to carry on construction with the stone still there. But we couldn’t permit them to remove the stone permanently, and neither could the stone be moved to another spot since its relevance is tied to its location,” an MHCC member said.

The only option, MHCC Chairman V Ranganathan told Mumbai Mirror, was to grant the MMRDA permission to temporarily remove the milestone. “We have asked them to keep it in a safe place and then re-install it once construction of the monorail is complete,” he said. “When its time to place it back, we will ensure it’s installed in its original place.”

MMRDA spokesperson Dilip Kawathkar assured that all permissions were in place and the milestone would be preserved well, and replaced at the same spot once construction was complete. Incidentally, the 13 milestones weren’t placed on just one route, and there are two eight-mile marks (the farthest), one at Sion and the other at Mahim.

Professor Varsha Shirgaonkar, who heads the history department at SNDT University, said the stones ended at Sion and Mahim as that’s where the city itself ended. “The cathedral was the city centre and stretched through Grant Road, Mazgaon, Parel and ended at Sion, she said. “Many of the stones have vanished. Despite being listed as Grade I heritage structures, they have not been conserved or protected.

The whole set of 13 marker stones is an intrinsic part of the city’s history,” she added, pointing out that the least the BMC could do was install plaques near the milestone to create awareness about the heritage stones. “The heritage water fountains too met with a similar fate. But the milestones are still there and those remaining should be protected.”

The heritage committee said it was unfair to blame them for how the milestones have been maintained, as it was only an advisory body, and the primary responsibility of conserving them remained with the BMC.

BMC officials say they had constructed a cement fence around the milestone a few years ago, but would check on the condition of the others once they received intimation from the heritage committee.







200-year-old Mumbai milestone survives Dadar blast

Published: Monday, Jul 18, 2011, 8:00 IST
By Rajendra Aklekar | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA

One of the 200-year-old Bombay city milestones at Dadar had a close shave in the serial bomb blasts that rocked the city on Wednesday.
In fact, one could say that it was the apathy of civic heritage authorities in conservation of the heritage milestone that actually saved it from destruction.
The milestone, located yards away from the ill-fated bus stop that was hit by the bomb blast on SK Bole Road at Dadar kabutarkhana, did not suffer damage in the blast as it remained buried in the footpath.
The effect of the blast ripped off parts of the steel bus stop, damaged parts of the pavement. Late Friday night, the lane of the Dadar bus stop, which was one of the sites of Wednesday's serial blasts, was thrown open to the public, after two days.
The city’s original 16 milestones, that are spread across the city were installed over two hundred years ago and served as the backbone of the seven islands that once Mumbai was. According to civic records, the one at Dadar reads as VII miles and was placed between 1816 and 1837.
“The milestone is a few yards away and it could not have been damaged even if it would have stood taller as the major impact of the blast at Dadar was at a higher level. Nevertheless, the milestone did have a close shave,” a conservation architect said.
The latest list of the Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority's Heritage committee lists 16 original milestones, including the one kept in the premise of the Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Byculla.
These milestones were built between 1816-1837 and these basalt stones, originally three or four feet tall, mark the distance in miles from St Thomas’s Church (today St Thomas’s Cathedral at Fort) which, in the eighteenth century, comprised the city-centre. This means they measure the distance of a particular location from the city's centre.
Of the 16 milestones listed, many are missing or have sunken into the ground during various road-widening projects or footpath building projects. BMC's heritage committee chairperson Dinesh Afzalpurkar, however, refused to comment on the issue.
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 The BMC’s heritage committee has stepped in to save a two century old milestone in the cit
 http://oldphotosbombay.blogspot.in/2012/12/the-bmcs-heritage-committee-has-stepped_6142.html


 

200-year-old Mumbai milestone TO SHOW THE DISTANCE FROM ST THOMAS CHURCH

The city’s original 16 milestones, that are spread across the city were installed over two hundred years ago and served as the backbone of the seven islands that once Mumbai was. According to civic records, the one at Dadar reads as VII miles and was placed between 1816 and 1837.



The latest list of the Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority's Heritage committee lists 16 original milestones, including the one kept in the premise of the Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Byculla.
I MILE
3 MILES
4 MILES
These milestones were built between 1816-1837 and these basalt stones, originally three or four feet tall, mark the distance in miles from St Thomas’s Church (today St Thomas’s Cathedral at Fort) which, in the eighteenth century, comprised the city-centre. This means they measure the distance of a particular location from the city's centre.

Saint Thomas's Church, Bombay.
Of the 16 milestones listed, many are missing or have sunken into the ground during various road-widening projects or footpath building projects. BMC's heritage committee chairperson Dinesh Afzalpurkar, however, refused to comment on the issue.




Alexander coins of his Indian campaign

Thursday, December 6, 2012

First look: Rs 4,300-crore Versova-Bandra Sea Link









First look: Rs 4,300-crore Versova-Bandra Sea Link

Yogesh.Naik @timesgroup.com


Artists impressions of the Versova-Bandra arm of the Sea Link,which in the future will extend all the way to Nariman Point along Mumbais western coast,shows three entry/exit points on the nine-km stretch,and one spot for a proposed extension in the future.
The plans,accessed by Mumbai Mirror,have already received one set of environmental clearances,and the MSRDC (the nodal agency for the Rs 4,340-crore project) is now preparing the groundwork for the tender process.
The link runs approximately 900 metres off the coast.The Maharashtra Coastal Zone Management Authority (MCZMA) has cleared the project,and passed it on to the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MOEF) with a recommendation that it be given a final go-ahead.
A marine geo-technical investigation,to obtain information on the physical properties of rock and soil on the sea-bed,began in October,and the MSRDC hopes to begin construction in January,2014.
A five-year deadline has been set for the project to be completed.

45


Minutes that commuters will save,according to MSRDC estimates

14


The number of signals you will skip by using the Versova-Bandra Sea Link

1500


Metres.The average depth of the superstructure

9.3


Kilometers.The (approximate) length of the Versova-Bandra Sea Link

16


Kilometers.The total length of roads that will be built,including the three connecting arms

2019


The year this segment of the Sea Link will be completed,if all goes to plan


The project plan includes a 150-metre cable-stayed bridge (similar to the stretch at the Reclamation end of the Bandra-Worli Sea Link) at Juhu beach,to ensure water transport is not affected.

Balance cantilever bridges with 100-metre spans will be built near Chimbai in Bandra,Khardanda and Juhu Koliwada all fishing villages to ensure fishermen can navigate the waters without difficulty.

At Versova,the Sea Link will join inland near Nana Nani Park,from where commuters can go right towards Juhu Circle,or left towards Yari Road.This connector will consist of six lanes (three in each direction).

The Juhu Koliwada connector will cut land on the stretch of beach at one end of Khar Danda,near Juhu Koliwada,and then go further inland before turning left towards Juhu road.This stretch will have four lanes.

The Versova-Bandra Sea Link meets the Bandra-Worli segment at a clover leaf intersection.A few kilometers before this,at the Otters Club end of Carter Road,space has been marked out for another connector,which can be built in the future.







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Real Ghost Stories>My Uncle's Haunted House

This police station is jinxed-MUMBAI




This police station is jinxed

Jun 01, 2007, 03:27 IST
Personnel posted at Oshiwara police station are an uneasy lot. They believe the station is jinxed because it was built on a plot that was once a burial ground. A sub-inspector who requested anonymity said, "The plot on which the police station stands has brought us bad luck. The police station


this space is vacant-why

Oshiwara police station is located on Link Road between Andheri and Jogeshwari. Policemen say it was built on what used be a burial ground and this is bringing them bad luck. (Right) Three years back, a temple was built in the premises by a builder


Personnel posted at Oshiwara police station are an uneasy lot. They believe the station is jinxed because it was built on a plot that was once a burial ground.

A sub-inspector who requested anonymity said, “The plot on which the police station stands has brought us bad luck. The police station is always embroiled in some controversy or the other.”

There have been several controversies, including three inspectors suspended in the last one year, three custodial deaths and a couple of officers have been named in bribery cases.

The controversies cited may have occurred in the last five years but policemen insist that there have been several since the station was constructed in 1990. In fact, they are often wondering who the next victim would be.

The station comes under the jurisdiction of deputy commissioner Vinay Choube. He is aware of the apprehension among his personnel. “There is no doubt that the police station has been in the news for some wrong reasons in the recent past,” he told Mumbai Mirror.

Many can’t stand the suspense and seek a transfer from Oshiwara as soon as possible.

Three years back, a temple was built in the premises to counter the jinx though the official version is that it was donated by a builder and has nothing to do with the jinx, sources said.

Senior inspector Kiran Sonone who joined Oshiwara  police station a fortnight ago  has decided to change the perception. He has heard of the history of the police station. “When the police station was built [in 1990], the plot was barren. But there used to be a [Muslim] cemetery at the site,” he said.

He has also heard that the plot brings bad luck to the personnel posted at the station.

“This could just be a belief among some officers. Many buildings have come up on such plots across the city. It is not right to attribute goof-ups to the plot,” Sonone said.

“I am trying to address the doubts among my staff and educate them by making them undergo relevant training. I have also taken the initiative to train my men in improving police-public relations,” he said.

Reasons for the unease

Late 1990s: A constable committed suicide by shooting himself inside the police station.

June 2002: Senior inspector Arun Kulkarni was caught accepting a bribe. Kulkarni was recently convicted in the case and imprisoned for three years.

September 2006: Senior inspector D N Jadhav unceremoniously transferred after a resident of Lokhandwala Complex complained he was sending her lewd SMSes.

April 2007: Senior inspector Ramkisan Rengutwar transferred after an accused in the (bar girl) Dolly Thakur abduction case escaped from custody. Inspector Dilip Patil was also transferred while inspector Chandrashekhar Gaikwad and two constables were suspended in connection with the case.

April 2007: Constable Ashok Ramane commits suicide at his residence in Vasai accusing a senior of demanding money.

May 2007: Robber escapes from Cooper Hospital where he was taken for treatment.


'haunted' tower in Kandivli-MUMBAI



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Haunted in Mumbai September 5, 2006 — Alphonso

Haunted places in Bombay. August 27, 2010 by bombaylives