Another city, another neighbourhood, another stream but same story
This is about a nala that flows through the dense urban concrete jungle of #Hyderabad city. It flows through Padma colony of nallakunta neighbourhood and eventually joined Musi river.
Like many streams and canals in urban environment in India, this stream also didnt have any buffer in case of severe floods and jailed with concrete walls and no room for it to breathe. For most of the year, these streams carry sewage water.
In this Padma colony section, where the nala didnt have any space already was contained further by constructing a street on top of it. The canal now became a duct below a functioning street. Its capacity gets reduced and is a potential clogging nightmare.
Google Maps - Street view of that street below which the canal is now flowing is displayed below.
This means that any small amount of construction or maintenance work or clogging happens, there is no more space for water to run and it would start flooding other places
Few days ago, when it rained heavily, the water from the canal breached the retaining wall and began flowing outside into the streets of Padma Colony (flooded areas marked in red) . Residents blamed it on corporation. Corporation blamed it on encroachments.
#Thread without Maps on #floods
If physical problems and solutions are known theoretically, then why are we not able to solve flooding situations in our cities whether it is Chennai or Bengaluru or Delhi?
There are 4 layers to the prob - Technical, Planning, Finance, Governance
Technical:
Our cities are not designed to take the rainfall that they face. The storm water drains are inadequate and the network is disconnected. Most of the drains are built in adhoc manner (if they are built). But why does this happen?
Cities don't have a storm water management plan. A plan that can comprehensively provide the technical details on the storm water network based on run off calculations, land etc is absent in most cases or poorly prepared in the remaining.
Why hasnt been it prepared?
#Thread on Vijaywada floods
In September this year, after a spell of heavy rain, Vijayawada was affected by severe floods. This thread would explore the geographical reasons behind it and what can be done from here.
(1/n)
2. #Map shows the profile of four major rivers in India. Vijayawada is in the lower section of Krishna river and close to where the river exits the plateau and enters the deltaic flat plains.
3. There are 3 basins in the region whose histories are intertwined. Vijayawada city is sitting on the Krishna and Kolleru systems. Though the Krishna river was also flooding, the city was actually flooded by Budameru Vagu, a seasonal river which is part of the Kolleru system
Google maps shows my GPS position to be well inside the sea in #Chennai Marina beach. But I was away from it. Why?
#Thread continuation of my previous one on Chennai #Marina beach 1/n
In the previous thread, I had explained how Marina beach is growing (sea becoming more and more land). Because of the longshore drift, lots of sand hence gets settled in the mouths of Cooum River.
To prevent further siltation in the mouth of the river, the government had built Groynes so that the capacity of the river doesn't get reduced.
#Thread
#Marina beach is one of the most iconic destinations in Chennai and one of the most visited beaches in the world. However the beach as we see today didn't exist a century ago.
This thread explains the formation of #Chennai's Marina beach 1/n
This map below shows the approximate original coastline of Chennai during British era. It was much closer to the Kamarajar road. A promenade was developed during the british era and that is when it got the name, "Marina". However the big sandy expanse itself didnt exist 2/n
Seas are very dynamic in nature. Whenever the waves hit the beach which is called as "swash", they bring in sand and when the water goes back ("backwash"), it removes the sand. This balance is critical for beach existence.
#Thread of #Maps that can help understand the #WayanadLandslide incident, its causes & impact
Please note that all the maps below were created with the information available as of now. Some of the damages outside the areas denoted might have been missed as info keeps coming
1. This part of #Wayanad is within the Chaliyar river system. It is a west flowing river which drains into the laccadive sea on Kerala coast (though at this part it is north and east flowing)
This map shows where the water drains. The area that is affected is shown in red.
2. In this particular section, the stream arises at around 2000 metres above mean sea level and has a steep fall of around 1200 m to reach Vellarmala, Chooralmala section.
#Thread
A collection of geographical myths & unknown facts about #Kanyakumari
1. Kanniyakumari is NOT the southern most point of mainland India, the southern most point is near star of the sea rock in nearby #Kovalam. In the last 20 years,it has been popularized as sunset point
2. Contrary to popular opinion, the three seas (Arabic Sea, Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean) don't meet in Kanniyakumari.
Officially, the sea around Kanniyakumari district is Laccadive sea. Check map below for official extents of the seas and their names
3. Before 1956, Kanniyakumari was part of Travancore which pre-independence was a separate princely state. The South Travancore lines (a series of fortifications) were built to protect #Travancore. Currently, a small amount of this fortification is visible near Kanniyakumari