[Cross posted from My Blog]
The Karnataka state government is tripping over itself trying to expedite the High Speed Rail Link (HSRL) to the new Bengaluru International Airport (BIA), conservatively expected to cost Rs. 5,200 - Rs. 5,700 Crore by completion date, somewhere by 2012.
The HSRL project has been put on the fast track, and the Karnataka State Industrial Investment and Development Corporation Limited (KSIIDC) has already published a Request for Qualification (RFQ) document on its website. KSIIDC is expected to announce the short-list by October 21. The letter of award to the bidder is estimated for February 16, 2009. Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC), is the project consultant.
The City Airport Terminal (CAT), the starting point of the HSRL is on Parade Ground next to the Chinnaswamy Stadium on M.G. Road, with stations at Hebbal and Yelahanka. The final station will be at BIA. The first three stations will be elevated, and the BIA station is has not been determined as yet.
I am confused on some aspects of the HSRL when trying to do a sanity check.
Sanity Check 1: Who is the target customer of the HSRL ?
In 2012, assuming the global economy revives in the next 12 months, oil prices reduce drastically, and BIAL's ambition of a south India hub comes true, I can project a maximum growth to 30 million passengers. Which translates to about 500,000 passengers, up and down, per week. Assuming 60% of passengers use the HSRL, this translates to a maximum of 300,000 trips per week.
Assuming 20,000 workers at the airport, if airport workers are added, then the number of weekly trips can increase 50% to 450,000 trips.
The time-table of "airport city" where another 100,000 people are expected to work is unknown at this time. When airport city reaches peak capacity we can assume another 250,000 trips per week.
Each category of person has differing needs.
Sanity Check 2: Convenience
The Central Business District (CBD) which includes M.G. Road area is completely choked with traffic. How many travellers are willing endure the pain and hardship to come to the CAT, and then take a train.
HSRL passengers from Central, South and South East part of Bangalore can still be expected to use the CAT, since it is on the way to the airport. Those from the western, eastern, and north-western suburbs are not going to spend enormous amounts of time deviating from the shortest possible route to come to the CAT. It is unclear if there is a park and ride facility at Hebbal.
Sanity Check 3: Close integration with Namma Metro and BMTC
A lack of close integration with the Metro is another area due for a sanity check. Integration with the Metro is vital for the long term success of the HSRL as it will provide the distributed connectivity to various parts of the city. As per my understanding, the Minsk Square metro station will be connected by a 200 meter walkway to the CAT. 200 meters with luggage does not remotely qualify as integration. There is no information available on whether the Vayu Vajra service will be linked to the CAT.
Sanity Check 4: Affordability
Passengers want to get to the airport in the shortest amount of time and are willing to pay a premium, but the airport worker wants affordability. BMTC has been forced to offer monthly passes on its much vaunted Vayu Vajra service for Rs. 2,500 per month, which translates to Rs. 50 per trip (compared to a planned Rs. 200 on the HSRL), and even this most workers and businesses find expensive.
Sanity Check 5: Financial Viability
If the HSRL will not cater to airport workers, then traffic will drop to 300,000 trips per week. Even at 500,000 trips per week, and at Rs. 200 a trip, the gross revenue will be about Rs. 520 Crore per year. A profit after tax (PAT) of 10% will result in an annual profit of just about Rs. 52 Crore, ridiculously small for a 5,000+ Cr outlay.
I have tremendous regard for Mr. E. Sreedharan, especially his construction achievements on the Konkan railway and DMRC, but DMRC does not enjoy the best of reputations on financial transparency. Sunil Jain's Rational Expectations article in today's Business Standard is a good reality check on how DMRC manipulates or suppresses figures to project a rosy picture, when in reality, it is not.
I am the first person to stand in the Yes column when it comes to better connectivity to BIA, including the HSRL. However, at a time when Karnataka has more pressing infrastructural and social needs, a detailed sanity check is required to ensure the HSRL does not turn out to be another white elephant draining the precious public coffers.
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Regards
Devesh R. Agarwal
Visit my aviation blog at http://aviation.deveshagarwal.com
ಪ್ರತಿಕ್ರಿಯೆಗಳು
High Speed Rail - BIA
Economic Rate of Return
I read the HSRL RFQ..
CAT and public transport
User Interaction Designer
Bangalore
HSRL and Cargo
User Interaction Designer
Bangalore
Why dedicated HSRL
that is planned
User Interaction Designer
Bangalore
one advantage..?
Confusion between HSRL and Yelahanka Metro
Mcadambi - BIAL HSRL recheck the sanity checks
By even transporting 100,000 people per day, atleast 100,000 private vehicles can get off the roads.
Herein lies the Sanity Check 1. Who is the target customer ? Passenger ? Worker ? Employee ? At its peak of 40 million passengers, the HSRL will transport 100,000 passengers a day. In 5 years when HSRL will be complete, BIAL can expect to be in the 20~25 MPPA category (assuming their expansion goes ahead). That is only 80,000 passengers per day (assuming 6 days a week, to cover for slack travel days). All 80,000 will not use HSRL. If 60% do, that is 48,000. Srivathsa Yajman was charitable and added a companion to the passenger each way, but we know that is simply not true. At best we can inflate by 25%. That is still 60,000 passengers. To increase ridership HSRL needs to get the workers at the airport. For them Rs. 400 per day x 25 days = Rs. 10,000 is plain not affordable.
Ideally, the HSRL will be connectted to the Metro which will enable people from Electronics City to take the metro towards Chinnaswamy Stadium and thence to BIA. This journey from EC-Cricket Stadium-BIA will take nothing more than 30 minutes max compared to 2 hours it might take even on the proposed Peripheral Ring Road which might come up at that time.
Sanity Check 2 : Is the metro connecting to EC ? Can someone on Praja please help. What is the southern most point of the metro 5 years hence ? What about the main traffic generating areas from Jayanagar to Sarjapur Road, Marathahalli, Indiranagar, Koramangala (not connected by Metro). CBD folks can drive to Parade Grounds. In total, 30 mins from southern most point to BIA cannot be 30 mins. That is the running time of the HSRL alone. But yes, 1.25 hours would be an accurate estimate.
Government look at economic rate of returns, viz., higher productivity, time savings, large tax returns, environmental benefits such as less carbon emissions, when planning large infrastructure projects.
Unwritten Sanity Check. Would 5000+ crore not be better spent in other projects that will have a more substantive economic and environmental effect in Bangalore and Tier 2 cities ?
-----------------------
Regards
Devesh R. Agarwal
Visit my aviation blog at http://aviation.deveshagarwal.com
Regards
Devesh
Bangalore Aviation
Enjoy life, destroy FUD
Narayan, recheck the sanity checks
Assuming the Hardware Park, convention centre and other utilities come up beside BIAL, the traffic would be more than just air travelers.
Recheck Sanity Check 4. Afforability.
What can be done, is to have 2 -3 coaches dedicated to airport travelerrs, and keep 1-2 coaches for regular users (passes). These can be subsidised to those working at BIAL and around.
Recheck Sanity Check 5: Financial Viability
-----------------------
Regards
Devesh R. Agarwal
Visit my aviation blog at http://aviation.deveshagarwal.com
Regards
Devesh
Bangalore Aviation
Enjoy life, destroy FUD
Cargo on HSRL
Sanity Check 1 : Who is the target customer ?
Also, BIAL has not provided for any connectivity inside the airport. Till today, they expect non-passenger customers to the airport to make their own arrangements, or use the shuttle bus from the trumpet. If any government run organisation had taken this approach, we would have crucified them for a callous attitude.
Thanks to all the respondents, but as I said, I am not opposed to HSRL, but we need to do a Sanity Check.
One thing most people have missed out, the HSRL, is not free to the residents of Bangalore. The tender document also allows for bids that will demand the lowest amount of "grant" from the state.
-----------------------
Regards
Devesh R. Agarwal
Visit my aviation blog at http://aviation.deveshagarwal.com
Regards
Devesh
Bangalore Aviation
Enjoy life, destroy FUD
EC link in Phase II of namma metro
the need
User Interaction Designer
Bangalore
Cargo will have to use existing Rail facilities
Comprehensive Evaluation!
Sanity check
Finally something that Devesh and I agree on (other than that Bishop Cottons is one lousy school :)).
I agree that Mr.Sreedharan is an outstanding executor of projects. However we need to do the right things before doing this right. A thorough evalauation of financials and risks needs to be done before we commit $1B to this.
A lot of the time taken to the airport (50% during non-peak hours) and 75-80% during peak hours is within the city. By spending Rs.5000 or 6000 crores we can add close to 60 route-km of Metro. A good Metro system can take 40000 passengers/hr in one direction. If 60 km is spread across 4 high traffic corridors, we can take somewhere in the 1-1.5 million range off our roads. The roads will become freed up and the ride to the airport will take less. NHAI is anyway planning some elevated roads and flyovers along NH7. Investing 1B should mean the most benefit for the maximum number of people. We don't need these showpieces.
Srivathsa
Drive safe. It is not just the car maker which can recall its product.
Isolation
User Interaction Designer
Bangalore
BIAL - ???????
Airport expressway rethink - incisive
Suhas
Suhas
Maglev Experience
Suhas
Suhas
Don't compare to Shanghai
Not really comparing :)
Suhas
Suhas
Slow progress at BIA
Hi Santsub, not heard from you in so many days.
You are very right. Things are very quiet at BIAL. A lot of the hard questions have been left unanswered.
My meeting, promised me by Mr. Brunner himself, never materialised. Even the one with Praja, does not appear to be on. Instead Prajagale, are being promised a tour from the tarmac to the terminal. Same thing I saw. Appears to be a major PR exercise. I am willing to bet, that none of the hard questions regarding past failures (like the Rs. 200Cr infusion of funds to make a bigger terminal back in 2006), future expansion, connectivity within the airport to cargo facilities etc., to be provided by BIAL, will not be answered. Everything will get wrapped back to UDF.
The cargo building are getting built and outiftted by AI-SATS. Menzies is ready. The cargo and customs agents building is still not delivered, nor is the airline offices building. Apron expansion and other facilities, no idea.
-----------------------
Regards
Devesh R. Agarwal
Visit my aviation blog at http://aviation.deveshagarwal.com
Regards
Devesh
Bangalore Aviation
Enjoy life, destroy FUD
Slow Progress... BIA
Hi-Speed Rail - Destined to Fail
Hi All,
Interesting thoughts !
I have just seen the CAT at Vienna - a dedicated train from Landstrabe-Wien Mitte (City center) to Flughaven (airport). With a sub-urban train (route S7) already in operation connecting the Vienna city center & various other points to the airport at lesser fare in about 25 minutes, the CAT is moving almost empty & costs an exorbitant 6 euros for the 'fast', 16 minute ride.
Elsewhere, in Berlin, the city with one of the largest Metro networks in the world, a bus service (TXL) operates between Berlin Tegel airport to Hauptbonhof, the Berlin central rail station, from where the UBahn /SBahn Metro is accessible to all parts of the city.
Bangalore's HSR will probably never materialize as the experience of operating dedicated airport trains is not very encouraging, even in the west. The Metro train (Route-A) that connects JFK in NewYork is a regular Metro train with many stops en-route, making it financially successful as it provides commuting facilities to all types of commuters, including air travellers.
I believe the best option for bangalore is to have a Metro line all the way from EC to BIAL, interfacing with other Metro /Mono lines at MG road, Hebbal, etc. This should have stops at about 1 km distances upto Yelahanka, & about 1.5 kms after that. This will also take care of daily & regular commuters + passengers for airport. A nominal additional fee can be levied for those bound for airport with luggage since security measures, etc. would be additional for baggage screening.
Alternately, if an airport dedicated rail system is to be provided, it could be a monorail on BOT basis where the builder /operator invests & meets all costs of construction & charges higher fares for air travellers to recover his costs. This could also use the same routing, but with fewer stops since it would cater to the needs of only air travellers.
HSRL is cheaper and ideal: Sreedharan
Dishum Dishum
Beg to differ with the big man
With due respect to Mr.Sreedharan, this borders on blackmail - "listen to me or else...". If the project is indeed as profitable, then there will be no dearth of private players. What are their names now that he says someone has come forward to do this.
Some basic questions from dimwits like me
a. Why can't Metro run on pillars? Why land acquisition for Metro and none for HSRL? Apples vs. elephants (not even oranges)
b. Metro cannot be implemented under the PPP model. Is this the 11th Commandment from the Bible?
c. Where has been stated that we need to travel in 23 minutes to BIAL? Can we have something that costs Rs.1000 crores and takes us in 45 mins? Has such an option even been considered?
d. With Bangalore getting into the league of ... HSRL is unavoidable. Tautological - HSRL is needed because HSRL is unavoidable.
e. Metro not ideal for connecting far off places. Singapore's EW line runs more than 35 km from Pasir Ris to Boon Lay.
f. Metro to airport not part of CTTP. Big Deal. High time Metro to North Bangalore was included in the CTTP.
g. Metro not viable unless 25000/hr. And HSRL is viable at 15000/day? This seems to come from the Bush School of Voodoo economics.
h. HSRL is cheaper than Metro. For whom? the passenger? the government? the non-airport using public. Please clarify.
h. Any talk of alternative will derail HSRL . If this is a good reason to build HSRL, I wonder what sort of thinking has gone into this project.
Srivathsa
Drive safe. It is not just the car maker which can recall its product.
Extend the Metro...
... and run a limited stop airport link rolling stock every 30 minutes or so for faster connectivity.
Srivatsa: Don't you think all we need would be an extra line and associated signalling in the stations without stops? That should not add much to the overall cost. I've seen many such bypass lines in Paris where faster trains zoom past stations.
Ravi
Re: Beg to differ with the big man
1. He was pushing the sky bus when he was with Konkan Railway & when the experimented with it in Goa, the moment he got shifted to Delhi metro, he started ditching Sky Bus where ever/when ever possible. How does it become the best technology when he is in, and obsolete the moment he is with another provider/technology?
2. He ditched Hyderabad metro the moment the AP govt. shifted it on PPP Model. Does he think that Govt. Equity will flow as in the case of Delhi Metro for other state citites? That too with a Govt. which thinks there is no land area for India beyond Vindhyachal
3. All praises(only praises) he got for Konkan & DM has made him Pomp Head, and thinks what ever he dictates is THE RIGHT.
RMB
Engineers Dream?
He did the Konkan rail..Delhi metro and now he wants HSRL to finish off!
Engineer's dream, Citizen's nightmare
Srinidhi,
Exactly. The tone seems to be - "How dare you people come in the way of my pet project? Don't confuse me with data, my mind is made up". We have many of these engineering marvels in Bangalore today - the Richmond Circle flyover, the cable bridge. The BETL will get added shortly to this list.
It costs only Rs.3800 crores as per him. We can have a BIAL branch near Sarjapur Road for that amount ;).
Srivathsa
Drive safe. It is not just the car maker which can recall its product.
Monorail instead of HSRL
The proposed Devanahalli Business Park could also be well served by the Monorail.
monorail maybe..
However with the govt decission banning borewells etc in that area has been a setback for development..hence may be monorail can suffice!
I have a couple of points
PPP will bring better services
Bengalooru and HSR
HSRL bhoot reappears !
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Land-takeover-for-HSRL-soon/articleshow/5783294.cms
"Besides cutting down commuting time to less than half an hour, HSRL could transform the economic landscape of the Bangalore North region, especially Devanahalli, Yelahanka and the airport corridor. Every large city — be it Shanghai, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur or London — has such a direct, high-speed link which results in economic multipliers far outweighing the high initial cost of construction"
Never understand CM's view on this..the two sentences above are forming an oxymoron..how can economic landscape of blr north change becos of this exclusive airtport link, as evident from the second sentence?
Economic growth happens when there is a public mass mover(read metro) not exclusive train(hsrl aka white elephant)
They all seem to be disillusioned with the fancy names in the proposals!
Abide doesnt like it and so do many others..why this now?
This is like saying 'Let them eat cake'!
HSRL bhootha reappears !
<repeat>
Common Sense should come first
We need to re-look at HSRL as mentioned by Mr Padiyar.
HSRL is short sighted approach, taking care of only few Airport Passangers & its going to be waste of Public money of Rs 2500 crore to be pumped by state and Center Govt with Public Land getting Transferred to some Pvt firms in the name of HSRL.
Govt should drop the HSRL and concentrate on improving the Broad Gauge Rail Track infrstructure with Double Track from Yelahanaka to Chikabbalapur and Electrifiction and ensure that Train can run with speed more then 120-140Kms/ Hr.
Why are we so much obsessed with Airport connectivity when
When the Railway Broad Gauge Line is running next to Aiprot, they should extend the same to Airport Terminal ( 2 Kms only ) and run intercity Express Trains from Airport to Bangalore city, Mysore, Bidadi, Hosur, Bangarpet, Nelamangala, Hassan Chikaballapur, Kolar, Doddballapur and Tumakur.
As the Agreeement with BIAL is that within radius of 200 Kms, no Aiprot exists, so above mentioned towns / cities need efficient, Mass and integration with other modes of transport needed to connect to BIAL.
HSRL will be of Big Failure if Govt still adamant in going ahead. This will become one good monument for Garden city. As this will not connect to other parts of Bangalore and near by Townships ./ Cities.
With population nearing one crore for Bangalore city and added to it other towns and cities arround BIAL, Broad Gauage Rail with High speed Train running at 120-140 Kms / Hr speed will really of big use for the Airport Connectivity and other connectivity.
I think we need to file PIL in High court against HSRL to get the Broad Gauge line extended upto BIAL Terminal with Intercity Train speed of 120-140 Kms/ Hr running ( Trains already are running with this speed arround Delhi to Agra ). For improving the Broad Gauge capcity, project cost will be less then 1000 Crore to improve the Infrastructure for the Track speed above 120-140 Kms/ Hr and cost of Rackes will be really less compared to the HSRL Rackes.
As mentioned by Mr Devesh R. Agarwal starting :
I have tremendous regard for Mr. E. Sreedharan, especially his construction achievements on the Konkan railway and DMRC, but DMRC does not enjoy the best of reputations on financial transparency. Sunil Jain's Rational Expectations article in today's Business Standard is a good reality check on how DMRC manipulates or suppresses figures to project a rosy picture, when in reality, it is not.
I am the first person to stand in the Yes column when it comes to better connectivity to BIA, including the HSRL. However, at a time when Karnataka has more pressing infrastructural and social needs, a detailed sanity check is required to ensure the HSRL does not turn out to be another white elephant draining the precious public coffers.
With project cost HSRL now stands more then Rs 10,000 crore, with Existing Broad Guage Track with running capacity of 120-140 Kms/ Hr will not cost imore then Rs 2000 Crore ( Max 20% cost of HSRL ) will benifit most of the people not only Airport Passangers.
Near future HSRL will become one more scandel similar to NICE or BIAL, As Lakhs of Educated professionals are living in Bangalore, we need Good, Efficient, Affordable meeting the requiremnt of One crore population of Bangalore city. Not the short sighted HSRL which will be benifical to Reliance, or some Pvt firms.
big projects..bigger kickbacks..
the eagerness of the CM makes one feel that its just the big payouts such projects would get and also big projects like this means name among public of something very big being done..
useful or not!
Closing of Hebbal Lake / Need to start campaign save Hebbal Lake
Activity No 1 :
NHAI will take up the task of converting the four-lane Hebbal flyover to six-lane, and make NH-7, from Hebbal flyover to the international airport, eight-lane wide and signal-free.
http://www.dnaindia.com/bangalore/report_tumkur-road-flyover-hits-a-roadblock_1373024
Already when Hebbal flyover was build in 2002-03, part of Hebbal lake was used for this. Now with one more ramp for the Flyover and expanding of the NH-7, this activity will bring down the Hebbal lake area.
Activity No 2 :
HSRL Hebbal station will be built on the left side of the Hebbal Flyover ramp while travelling from City. HSRL has project a need of 7 acer land of Hebbal Lake to construct the Check in Station. Further pillers of HSRL on the lake bed need to come up here.
On the rigth side of the Fly-over, traffic integration facility will come up as per DPR study of so called DMRC
Activity No 3 :
MonoRail from Yesvanthpur to do the feeder service to HSRL at Hebbal with further Traffic intigration.
With all these activity, I think Govt & IDD departments have good plan to close the Hebbal lake at the earliest in the name of Development.
Why IDD & Govt are not exploring the existing SWR track and further capacity addition to SWR tracks from KR Puram, Yesvanthpur, Hosur-Ankela to K R Puram, Bangarapet-Whietfiled to Yelahanaka. In all these segments, travell time will be arround 35-50 Minites as recently introduced passanger train from Yesvanthpur to Devanhalli takes 60 Minites as this will stop at all stations. If We have Fast Local Train with Electric engine, travell time will be less then 40 Minites.
Now with HSRL from MG road will be 30 Minites and further add the time taken to reach at MG road or Hebbal ( only two location ) will be more then 60 Minites.
With METRO getting integrated at four location to SWR stations at Mejestic, Yesvanthpur, Byappanahalli, Mysore Road, their is no sense & its clear picture for wha purpose IDD is working hard to sign the deal for HSRL with 10, 000 crore project & govt money in that is 2000 crore with 300 acre of Land being given to Pvt party for property development.
I hope Praja Members do the bit of campaign to Save the Hebbal Lake.
HSRL work from 2011 and so costly..?
The line will start from BRV Grounds and head through MG Road, Raj Bhavan Road, Sankey Road, Windsor Manor junction, Mehkri Circle and the Hebbal flyover. From Hebbal flyover, the track will be laid at ground level along NH-7.
http://www.dnaindia.com/bangalore/report_board-your-flight-one-train-at-a-time_1398789
Guess the earlier plan was to do stilts till Yelahanka AFB and do underground there and back ariel after that..and guess thats why the cost was so high..6900 crores..
But is it the same cost with going at grade from hebbal??
What are they talking here? What abt the cost Sreedharan said about 3,800 crores when he compared with metro and said metro would be costlier!?
http://bangalorebuzz.blogspot.com/2009/01/hsrl-is-cheaper-and-ideal-sreedharan.html
biscuit..biscuit mama!
Glad that they put it down !
....On the ground. So, now we can travel more safely, or should I say - with reduced danger !
Already 2+ yrs lapsed after openig of BIAL & still to wait 3+ yr
Now its more then two years, BIAL was opened and BIAL project was started 5 Years back. Still we are debating on connectivity to BIAL. Even HSRL work starts, this will need another 3 years from now.. In this, all of us keep on waiting for things to happen at the mercy of some interest.
Why State & Center are not showing interest ./ eagerness to run slow and fast Local Trains upto BIAL Trumphet interchange on existing Railway Tracks from Bidadi, Whitefiled, Nelamangala, Hosur, Tumkur.
Citizens / travellers have already suffered by paying high amount and inconvenience to reach BIAL and why again Passengers need to suffer for another next three - four years.
Let HSRL take its own time, but let State & Center should start Local slow and Fast Trains to Devanahalli & provide station below Trumpet interchange. Also at this location, KSRTC has planned to build Transit Center on PPP. So by having railway station and KSRTC Transit Center, will l provide good integration with BMTC can solve coming days traffic problem on NH-7
The route
The route - Cubbon Road, Raj Bhavan Road, Chowdaiah Road, Windsor Manor bridge, Bellary Road, Mehkri Circle, Hebbal flyover (where elevated HSRL crosses over on the right side)
Source
Bye Bye Golf Course?
First the road expansion and now the HSRL...the golf course may be reduced to the size of a theme park with a mini course..putting only! :P
Cant TBM's be used here at all...afterall its a nice stretch of the city?..it can go ariel at Mekhri as the road is wide enough..
Where did the ball dissapear..naw its a obstruction..its taken a train ride...will be back in a few!
Commuter trains a hit, city to get more soon
Bengaluru, May 14: Considering the encouraging response to passenger trains on local circuits, more of them could be introduced in the city shortly. For instance, the train to Devanahalli could be extended to Chikkajala for the comfort of passengers heading to the Bengaluru International Airport (BIA), but railway officers say it could take at least three to four years to provide seamless rail connectivity to the BIA.
The railways have been encouraged by the response to the passenger trains running from Yeshwanthpur to Devanahalli and Yeshwanthpur to Hosur, which have been seeing occupancy of more than 70 per cent, mainly due to the low fares and the connectivity they offer to the suburbs.
South Western Railway officials are now in talks with the infrastructure development department to chalk out more such circuits for the trains based on passenger utility surveys.
http://www.deccanchronicle.com/bengaluru/commuter-trains-hit-city-get-more-soon-813
So, now IDD / State Govt with BMTC should provide good connectivity to BIAL, hope to see more trains to Devnahalli soon.
Sanjeev
Bengaluru airport to wait another decade for rail connectivity
In the next 10 years, when passenger traffic will almost double, expect congestion on roads to increase
Guess when Bengaluru will get rail connectivity to its airport? Not before 2025, the year passenger traffic is expected to touch 40 million and nearly two decades after the international airport opened for passengers.
This is an optimistic estimate. The Karnataka government is expecting metro connectivity in the third phase from the city to the Kempegowda International Airport, according to Chief Secretary Kaushik Mukherjee.
The first phase of 42.3 km, for which work began in 2007, is only partially operational. Work on the second phase, which costs Rs 26,000 crore, has barely begun with a timeline of another six years to complete.
After this, work on the third phase is expected to begin, provided Bangalore Metro Corporation Ltd, the agency that is building the metro, finalises a plan, gets it approved and ties up the finances.
The Bengaluru airport, the third busiest in the country, handled 18 million passengers till March this year. So in the next 10 years, when passenger traffic will almost double, expect congestion on roads to increase. It is now a two-hour drive from the city centre to the airport. From Electronics City, where offices of Infosys and Wipro are located, it takes even longer.
“Poor connectivity will lead to exasperation of passengers coming from or going to the airport. If the city is an economic hub for a state or the country, this could have an adverse impact on the business community,” said Deepak Baindur, an expert in urban transport, planning and management at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements.
Most Indian cities have seen delays in metro construction. In July, the Maharashtra government sought help from Delhi Metro Rail Corporation to expedite the construction of the Mumbai metro to 120 km from 11.4 km before 2019.
In Delhi, the DMRC has completed around 200 km. Hyderabad hopes to complete the first stretch of 17 km by 2016. Chennai opened its first stretch of 11 km in July.
Bengaluru, to make matters worse, is adding more vehicles on its roads. The city has more traffic violations booked than vehicles – 7.43 million violations booked in 2014 for 5.56 million vehicles. The city can also claim to have more vehicles per person than any other in the country. For every two Bengaluru residents, there are one-and-a-half vehicles – 5.56 million vehicles in March 2015 for a population of 9.5 million, according to the 2011 census.
Since then, migration to Bengaluru has grown thanks to the high-paying jobs the city generates and its cosmopolitan culture.
It is not that the government did not plan rail connectivity to the airport. A high-speed rail network to the city was discussed long before work on building the airport began. It was shelved.
Early this week, former DMRC Chairman E Sreedharan called for a high-speed rail network that will cover the 35 km distance from the city to the airport in around 20 minutes.
A six-lane highway that could dump passengers right into a traffic mess at Nagawara was also shelved. A half-built four-lane tollway is now operational on an existing national highway that connects the airport to Hebbal, an intersection that separates the highway to the city.
It takes 30 minutes to drive 25 km to this point and another hour to drive 10 km to MG Road, the central business district.
A railway station in Devanahalli connects the city and the track passes outside the airport. A 2005 plan to operate suburban trains to Devanahalli is still in the works.
“The railways certainly could address this. A line at Hebbal is underutilised. Instead of going for a metro, if we speed up a commuter rail network, it will be far cheaper than the metro,” said Baindur.
"We know the solution and if it is not addressed, the consequences for the city would be dire. If we are not able to provide public transit services, in effect, we will see more cars and services such as Ola car service."
http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/bengaluru-airport-to-wait-another-decade-for-rail-connectivity-115082000826_1.html
Well written article and its fact. With further delay in METRO, full fledge connectivity to Airport will be reality by 2030 only and that too depends on funds allocation by GOK abd GOI has washed its hands for Bangalore.
run metro to KIA at grade?
Yes, Bangalore is adding close to 2000 vehicles onto its roads every day..at this rate we will not have enough roads to handle the vehicles!
A very prudent thought is to dedicate one lane of road space (15 ft) at grade for the metro. Yes, this will give rise to some challenges for road users and for that we can have underpasses(magic) and bridges as needed..
All this will do is make the trip to the airport faster and make a statement to the public that they do not need personal vehicles all the time!
BRTS more viable
Hi Srinidhi,
To get metro itself till Nagawara would take another decade atleast looking at complete underground Nagawara - IIM line. Easiest solution would be to have dedicated bus lanes. Most sustainable option. Elsewhere there is road width limitation, whereas here we have double decker road.
when their is no will from GOK or GOI, next 15 years we wil not
Next 15 years Devanhallai Airport will not see any mass public transport expcet these high cost BMTC buses ( equvialent to travelling by taxi if 2 /3 people go to airport )
METRO PH-1 itself becoming very hot for GOK to keep floating the white elephant, then already PH-2 is draging its weight so that GOK will sink and intern city sinks on debt burden.
Bangalore need a bailout package from PM for all these white elephents to surrive or citizens not to have much tax burden.
So in effect, BIAL Aiport can look forward for mass Public Transport only after 2025
Looking at the BIAL , which itself is not intrested to get the halt railway station below Trumphet Flyover, which may cost just 50 Lakhs to One Crore. That means BIAL does not want mass Public Transport so that more cars pass thru toll highway and more cars pay the parking fees at BIAL Airport.
This subject going since 2007, so some one can do the PHD
I feel from academic point of view also, some can take up PHD how BIAL airport still works hard to miss the Public Transport with help of GOK, BMRCL, SWR, BMTC and BBMP.
Discussion were their for HSRL, Mono Rail, METRO, Commuter Rail, BRTS, shuttel helicpoters, FLY BY Bus service, Taxi.
With just two lane road inside BIAL, how long wil it take to get jammed during peak hrs like in the morning and evening ???