advertisement
(This article was first published on 3 October 2017 and is being republished in the aftermath of a CST overbridge collapse on 14 March 2019.)
The stampede at Elphinstone Road railway station in Mumbai, that killed twenty-three people, turned a daily routine for hundreds of commuters into a nightmare. Most stampede tragedies in India, have occurred on special occasions such as religious festivals, but the tragedy at Elphinstone stood out for its everydayness.
The Quint speaks to urban planners, transport experts and architects to understand the fault lines in how we plan and live in our cities.
Too long to read? Listen to the story here.
Now known for its swanky office complexes, Lower Parel and Elphinstone Road was once known by a different name — ‘Giran-gaon’ or the city of textile mills. After the mills shut down in 1980s and 1990s, redevelopment of the mill lands (prime real estate in Central Mumbai) caused a radical shift in land use in Mumbai — it changed the city’s skyline.
The mills were replaced by corporate offices, restaurants and malls. But the civic infrastructure in the area wasn’t revamped in keeping with the radical burst in population that followed. Urban planner Chandrashekar Prabhu says:
A city’s infrastructure should keep up with changing demographics and the lack of infrastructural development which accompanied redevelopment of textile mills was a lost opportunity — and a root cause of the Elphinstone Road stampede. What worked for mill workers in the late 90s won’t be adequate for thrice the volume of office goers in 2017. Rishi Aggarwal, director of Mumbai Sustainability Centre and an urbanisation expert says:
There are many flaws in the design of Elphinstone Road local railway station — which could have been rectified with simple infrastructural changes.
But who’s responsible for the lack of action in redevelopment of railway stations? In 2015, a nine-member panel was set up by Central Railways and a 25-member team by Western Railways to address accidental deaths on Mumbai’s suburban trains. Out of the 19 MPs in the 25-member panel, only one MP showed up. Speaking to the Hindustan Times in 2015, Subhash Gupta criticized the “negligent attitude” of politicians in addressing “issues passengers face.” Himanshu Burte, architect and assistant professor at the School of Habitat Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) also raises the issue of coordination between government and the railways.
In the aftermath of the Elphinstone Road stampede, it’s a question which most Mumbaikars are asking in anger and frustration. Forget the famous ‘spirit of Mumbai’ and perennial resistance — what are the things which can be immediately done to prevent a similar stampede from occurring in Mumbai’s local railway stations? Rishi Aggarwal extends some easy-to-implement and affordable solutions:
As Mumbai returns to normalcy after the stampede, the question which remains is what will it take for the government to prevent another stampede like the disaster at Elphinstone Road station. As Rishi Aggarwal says:
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)