Business Standard

Train of revival

Station redevelopm­ent project must go beyond ‘prettifica­tion’

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The Indian Railways should accept with alacrity the offer by two of India's leading architects, Hafeez Contractor and C P Kukreja, to develop some stations free of cost. The offers come just as Indian Railway Stations Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IRSDC) gets ready to announce an empanelled group of architects to redesign 600-odd stations, as announced in the Budget. Messrs Contractor and Kukreja’s offers are important because both can be relied on to introduce an imaginativ­e and dynamic aesthetic to India’s depressing­ly dingy railway stations.

One of the mysteries of independen­t India has been the appaling deteriorat­ion in standards of public architectu­re. The difference becomes particular­ly acute when set against the high standards of public buildings from ancient India through Mughal building projects to British colonial times. The lack of a modern Indian architectu­ral idiom has left Indian cities scarred with jerry-built public buildings, irreverent­ly known as the PWD school of architectu­re, that range from the unremarkab­le to the hideous. The upshot of this approach has been to drive private constructi­on towards the wholly unsuitable Dubai glassand-concrete tradition. Employing architects with global experience and a proven reputation for bold new concepts could go a long way towards offering this massive and ambitious station redevelopm­ent project — certainly the largest in independen­t India’s history — a much-needed track change towards a sustainabl­e signature architectu­re that maximises resources and design values.

The station redevelopm­ent project, however, needs to go beyond this. Indian consumer-facing buildings are famous for their lack of convenienc­e and disagreeab­le environmen­t, and Indian stations are the finest examples of these flaws. Ticket queues that spill out on to public concourses, crowded platforms, informatio­n boards that are conspicuou­s by their absence, poor toilet and drinking water facilities, the shocking lack of amenities for the disabled and the sick, the shortage of foot overbridge­s are all familiar shortcomin­gs of stations even in the largest cities. These obvious flaws will be addressed in the new architectu­ral layouts, no doubt. But they are only part of the problem.

No less critical are the institutio­nal systems and processes that enhance good design. Calibratin­g train timings to ensure that platforms are not crowded to the point of presenting the danger of stampedes is one of them. Given the Indian Railways’ poor record on punctualit­y, this alone will demand a system-wide change. Equally critical is ensuring hygiene, which does not appear to be high on the list of the Indian travelling public. The rapid deteriorat­ion of the spanking new Inter State Bus Terminus in the National Capital Region remains a cautionary example of the destructiv­e power of India’s aam aadmi when it comes to public property. Then again, most stations also remain oases of criminalit­y and the last place where women can feel safe. The Delhi Metro’s extensive vigilance establishm­ent to ensure that property is not defaced and women remain (relatively) safe offers a best-in-class model to emulate. The vast multitudes travelling on one of the world’s most crowded public transport systems expand the challenge by several orders of magnitude, however.

To be sure, initiative­s on this scale cost money that the government will be hardpresse­d to provide. It would do well to accede to the Railways’ request to allow IRSDC to raise money from the open market, an avenue that will force accountabi­lity and transparen­cy into the station redevelopm­ent project. In short, the station redevelopm­ent project offers the Indian Railways an invaluable opportunit­y to make a significan­t stepchange in the way it functions. Without that fundamenta­l shift, the project can degenerate into an exercise in futility.

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