Today's Paper
» NATIONAL
» KARNATAKA BANGALORE,
March 5, 2013
City still on waitlist for better rail facilities
The main station lacks proper infrastructure
Bangaloreans’ hopes for better railway facilities, in
terms of new trains — suburban as well as long distance — and upgrading
of railway infrastructure were belied by the latest Railway Budget.
With
more than 2.2 lakh people travelling by trains to and from Bangalore
daily and many more willing to travel by rail if more berths and trains
are available, residents hoped for a better deal from the Union
government.
Long waitlists
All
long-distance trains, particularly those bound for Gujarat, Rajasthan,
Bihar, West Bengal and Assam, run full with long waitlists.
With
no immediate signs of Byappanahalli turning into the third coaching
terminal after the saturated city and Yeshwantpur terminals, any hope of
introduction of new trains has receded further.
Though
the Bangalore region has enough railway networks, it is not utilised to
offer local connectivity that could have greatly reduced the burden on
the city’s roads.
A commuter rail system for the city
— in demand for over two decades — too appears to have become a pipe
dream with both the State government and the Railway Ministry not
arriving at any decision.
Wanted: overhaul
While
Yeshwantpur Railway Station, the second terminal handling an average 44
pairs of trains a day, doing a decent job, it is the city station,
handling at least 88 pairs of trains a day, which is in need of an
overhaul.
K.N. Krishna Prasad, a retired government
official, said the look and facilities of this central station don’t
match the status of Bangalore as India’s Silicon Valley. Citing
examples, he points to the inconsistent lengths of its platforms,
absence of easy access to them, improper functioning of coach indicator
displays and the abnormal delay in completing the Okalipuram entry
building.
Ready for more
A.K. Agarwal, Divisional Railway Manager, of South Western Railway’s Bangalore Division, told
The Hindu
that stations in Bangalore are capable of handling 10 more pairs of new trains as two pit lines are ready in Byappanahalli.
Operation
of either suburban trains or commuter rail appears difficult because
there are fewer tracks, platforms and funds, he said.
Mr. Agarwal said that funds crunch has affected speedy completion of the new booking office on the Okalipuram side.
He
hoped that it would be completed by July. He said the city station
would get an executive waiting lounge as announced in the Railway Budget
and escalators.
It will also get a bus bay,
according to Senior Divisional Commercial Manager N. Ramesh, who said
the Byappanahalli Station is being upgraded with two reservation
counters, platform shelters, pay-and-use toilets and pit lines for train
maintenance.
No movement on the Byappanahalli terminus front
More than 2.2 lakh travel by trains to and from city
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