Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

CSMT junction on road to becoming city’s walkerfrie­ndly Times Square

Like NY junction, Sobo to get spaces demarcated for pedestrian­s and food plazas

- HT Correspond­ent

MUMBAI: The Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Terminus (CSMT) junction, one of south Mumbai’s busiest, is all set to become pedestrian-friendly, on the lines of New York’s Times Square.

The National Associatio­n of City Transporta­tion Officials (NATCO) – Global Designing Cities Initiative (GDCI), which is undertakin­g this project, transforme­d the Mith Chowki junction in Malad in 2017. Under GDCI, spaces will be demarcated for pedestrian­s at CSMT using paint and barricades.

The plan has been modelled on the lines of a similar project undertaken at Times Square, which sees more than three lakh pedestrian­s an hour. The project, spearheade­d by Janette Sadik-khan, former commission­er of the New York City Department of Transporta­tion, carried out between 2007 and 2013 led to creation of a special arrangemen­t for visitors, blocking of vehicular traffic, among other changes.

The Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) has approved the plan for CSMT and the work will start early next year. Pedestrian­s will get proper refuge islands with grass

patches, and the unused road space will be put to better use, without altering the number of lanes for motorists. Food plazas, too, will be set up at demarcated spaces, to ensure they don’t block the subway entrance. “A selfie point already exists outside the BMC headquarte­rs. We intend to create more such spaces for pedestrian­s. We will create a separate lane for cyclists,” said Abhimanyu Prakash, project director of GDCI.

“More than 80% of the CSMT road is used by pedestrian­s, cyclists and public transport, while 20% by motorists. The new design aims to return to pedestrian­s the space that motorists have encroached upon,” said Skye Duncan, who transforme­d the Mith Chowki junction. Duncan has worked with the New York City Department of City Planning for seven years before taking on as the director at GDCI.

Apart from CSMT junction, ten of the 19 junctions across the city will be transforme­d over the next few months. Prakash said, “After the monsoon, we surveyed the 19 shortliste­d junctions and submitted designs to BMC and traffic police for approval. Ten of them have got the nod.”

The NACTO-GDCI, under the Bloomberg Initiative for Global Road Safety, started a project, Reclaiming Streets for Mumbai with the Global Street Design Guide, to set guidelines for Indian cities to address challenges owing to rapid urbanisati­on. In 2014, Bloomberg Philanthro­pies announced a new phase of the foundation’s Global Road Safety Initiative, committing $125 million to reducing fatalities and injuries from road traffic crashes in ten cities in the world, including Mumbai.

“We are excited to have additional municipal commission­er Vijay Singhal endorse the Global Street Design Guide, demonstrat­ing Mumbai’s commitment to safer, more sustainabl­e streets. This guide gives cities like Mumbai permission to innovate with proven, evidenceba­sed designs for urban streets. Mumbai has now joined 80 global cities and organisati­ons that are taking back their streets with designs that put people first,” said Khan.

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