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Notes
Planning
Illustrate any one of the best examples of residential sector planning in post independent
new towns of India
Residential sector in chandigarh
The basic planning unit of the city is a sector, 800 by 1200 metres with a
population varying between 3,000 and 20,000, depending upon the size of the
plots and the topography of the area
The dimensions of the sector are derived from a “modular” conception. Corbusier
established a distance of 400 metres as a sort of outer limit of modular perception
a distance beyond which measures could not be readily grasped.
Each sector is based on the concept of a neighbourhood unit which ensures
necessities like shops, educational institutions, health centers, places of recreation
and worship within a walkable distance
Introvert in character, a sector is bounded by fast-traffic roads running on its four
sides and permitting only four vehicular entries into its interior
This difficulty is particularly encountered in mixed land use area and hence, in
such instances remotely sensed information has to be intensively cross checked
with ground information
Certain types of information such as about the health status, and age and sex
structure of population and similar other details have to be obtained through a
detailed socio-economic survey in the filed.
What do you understand by “sight distance” in a traffic flow? Write the expression for
“ braking distance” of a vehicle on a roadway
Sight distance from a point is the actual distance along the road surface, which a driver
from a specified height above the carriageway has visibility of stationary or moving
objects. In other words, sight distance is the length of road visible ahead to the driver at
any instance
Braking distance of a vehicle is the distance travelled by the vehicle after the application
of the brakes, to a dead stop position
l = v2 / 2gf where
l = braking distance in metres
v=speed of vehicle in metres / sec
f = design coefficient of friction = 0.4 to 0.35 dpending on speed, from 30 to 80 kmph
g = acceleration due to gravity = 9.8 metres / sec2
Explain the concept of “Eminent Domain” and “Police power” in relation to town
planning?
Eminent domain - by which the government can acquire any private property for
the sake of public welfare, public health and public safety
Police power - by which the developmental authorities can control the nuisances
and the undue developments. Most of the developmental controls like building
bye-laws and planning laws emanate from this police power.
State the administrative procedures under the land acquisition act 1894 and the recent
amendments to expedite the process of land acquisition
Whenever any government department or a public authority want to acquire any land,
they must send their requisition proposal to the appropriate office of the government
(normally designated as land acquisition collector – who is in every district and big cities)
who will on behalf of the department or public authority, which needs the land, go
through the various stages of the land acquisition procedure until he takes possession of
the land and hands it over to the concerned department or the public authority.
Explain the hierarchy of recreational open spaces in urban areas in terms of physical size
and facility standards
Category Population Area in Facility standards
per unit hectares
Totlot 500 0.05 Paved area, playground apparatus
Describe the salient features of 73rd constitutional amendment act of India, and its role in
empowering grass root level organizations
There shall be constituted in every state panchayats at avillage, intermediate and
district level
To have proper representation of population in all areas, the ratio between the
population of a territorial area of a panchayat and the number of seats, which are
filled by election, shall be same throughout the state
Normally duration of panchayat is five years
The legislature of a state may endow the panchayat with such powers to enable
them to function as institutions of self government, subject to conditions, with
respect to prepaation and implementation of plans for economic development and
social justice
Panchayats may be given powers to impose taxes, duties, tolls and fees subject to
limits
A finance commission may be constituted to review financial position of the
panchayat
What do you understand by the terms of parking accumulation, parking index and
parking turnover?
Parking accumulation
The total number of vehicles parked in an area at a specified time.
Parking Index
Percentage of the theoretically available number of parking bays actually occupied by
parked vehicles.
Parking turnover
Rate of the usage of available parking space.
Outline the salient features of the “Central place theory” of Christaller. Use a diagram to
explain your answer
Basic elements are
A central good
A central place
A complimentary region
Assumptions
1. Christaller assumed a homogenous plane with even distribution of natural
resources, consumer preferences and production techniques for each and every
product.
2. Transport cost, demand functions and economics of scale would vary from
product to product and this spatial range of goods and services produced will
also vary
What was the major planning issue that the plan of radburn helped to resolve? Show
through a neat schematic diagram how the radburn plan achieved this objective.
This plan introduced the “super block”, each block ranging from 30 to 50 acres in size,
where through traffic is eliminated. With in them single-family dwellings were grouped
about cul-de-sac roads. Kitchen and garages faced the road, while living rooms turned
park strip, leading to large, common open spaces within the center of the super-block.
terms of (i) transportation (ii) utility networks. Illustrate your answer with schematic
diagrams.
(a) Distinguish between “Time mean speed” and “Space mean speed”
(b) Estimate the average travel speed of an urban road based on the following information
1. 4.5
2. 3.45
3. 3.0
4. 6.0
Time-mean speed is the average of the speed measurements at one point in space over a
period of time
Space-mean speed is the average of the speed measurements at an instant of time over a
space
w.k.t speed = distance / time expressed in terms of kmph ( kilometers per hour)
= 4.2375 min
= 0.070625 hr.
Name the amendment act and the schedule of the constitution of India that provide for the
responsibilities and functions of urban local bodies. Outline the steps necessary to
TWELFTH SCHEDULE
Highlight briefly the features and applications of GIS in decision making in planning
Natural resources
wildlife habitat
wild and scenic rivers
recreation resources
floodplains
wetlands
agricultural lands
aquifers
forests
minerals and exploration
oil and gas
Land parcel-based
zoning - urban and regional
subdivision planning and review
environmental impact assessment
water quality management
maintenance of land ownership
land valuation and taxation
town planning schemes
Infrastructure
transport route planning
street address matching
location analysis, site selection
disaster planning and evacuation
Socio-economic
population distribution and forecasting
demographic marketing and analysis
monitoring of patient health
epidemiology
suitable example
The basic components of an ideal remote-sensing system are shown in figure 8. These
include the following components.
A uniform energy source. This source will provide energy over all wavelengths, at a
constant, known, high level of output, irrespective of time and place.
A non-interfering atmosphere. This will be an atmosphere that will not modify the
energy from the source in any manner, whether that energy is on its way to earth’s
surface or coming from it. Again, ideally this will hold irrespective of wavelength,
time, place, and sensing altitude involved.
A series of unique energy/matter interaction at the earth’s surface. These interactions
will generate reflected and/or emitted signals that are not only selective in respect to
wavelengths, but also are known, invariant, and unique to each and every earth
surface feature type and subtype of interest.
A super sensor. This will be a sensor, highly sensitive to all wavelengths, yielding
spatially detailed data on the absolute brightness (or radiance) from a scene (a
function of wavelength), throughout the spectrum. This super sensor will be simple
and reliable, require, virtually no power or space, and be accurate and economical to
operate.
A real-time data handling system. In this system, the instant the radiance versus
wavelength response over a terrain element is generated, it will be processed into an
interpretable format and recognized as being unique to the particular terrain element
from which it comes. This processing will be performed nearly instantaneously (real
time), providing timely information. Because of the consistent nature of the
energy/matter interactions, there will be no need for reference data in the analytical
procedure. The derived data will provide insight into the physical-chemical-biological
state of each feature of interest.
Multiple data users. These people will have comprehensive knowledge of both their
respective disciplines and of remote-sensing data acquisition and analysis techniques.
The same set of data will become various forms of information for different users,
because of their vast knowledge about the particular earth resources being used.
Unfortunately, an ideal remote-sensing system, as described above, does not exist. Real
remote-sensing systems fall short of the ideal at virtually every point in the sequence
outlined.
Indicate the factors that govern the utility of Para - transits in urban areas?
Para-transit – Auto, cycle rickshaw etc.,
What are the parameters to be considered for determining the sample size for a house
hold survey?
Level / degree of confidence (degree of accuracy of the collected sample
expressed in percentage)
Variability of the parameter
Population size
State the major advantages of vertical aerial photographs over a map for its application in
urban planning
Vertical aerial photographs are taken with the axis of the air borne camera vertical (a
deviation of less than 3 degrees from the vertical is accepted). These photographs are
commonly used for mapping and interpretation purposes (gives true geometry of the
ground in the form of base map, provides information about vegetation cover, soils,
geological and geomorphologic features and drainage pattern)
What is “Human Development Index”? What are the advantages of using this index
Every year since 1990, the United Nations development programme has studied the
quality of life in many countries. The Human Development Index is the result of this
study. The index uses factors such as life expectancy, adult literacy rate and per-capita
income to determine the rankings.
State the important stages in land acquisition procedure while acquiring land for public
purpose
Publication of preliminary notification by the Government that a particular land is
needed or likely to be needed for a public purpose
Hearing of objections to the above mentioned notification from interested parties
by the collector and his report to the Government in this matter
Declaration by the Government that the land is required for a public purpose
Notification by collector declaring Government’s intention to acquire land and
calling for claims for compensation from interested parties
Enquiry into the compensation claims and passing of award by the collector
Taking possession of the land by the collector after payment of compensation and
handing it over to the authority requiring the same
What are the various forms of non property taxes that can be imposed by a municipality
for mobilization of development funds?
Betterment tax
Professional tax
Tax on real estate
Water tax
Indicate the factors to be considered for describing the economic profile of a region
Per-capita income
Demographic content of the region
Industrial scenario
Service sector
Trade and commerce
Informal sector employment
Which factors are to be considered for “life cycle cost analysis” while evaluating
alternative materials in any urban construction project?
Cost of the material
Benefit obtained from the material
Maintenance cost of that material
A city had grown geometrically at a rate of 7% per annum from 1991 to 2001. In the year
2001, the city had a population of 701276. The net migration rate for the city during the
above period had been 10 per thousand population. What was the net migration to the city
during 1991 to 2001
701276 = Po (1 + 7/100) 10
Po ( population in the year 1991 ) = 356493
Increase in population = Pt – Po = 701276 – 356493 = 344783
Net migration rate is 10 per 1000 i.e. 1%
Net migration to the city during 1991 to 2001 = 1% of increase in population from 1991
to 2001
= 1% of 344783
= 3447.83 ~ 3444 persons
Mention the limitation of GIS as a planning tool. Which are the other support systems
that are to be interlinked with GIS to make it an effective planning tool?
All GIS applications require digital geographic data (common reference data &
application data).
PLANNING PROCESS:
All stages of actions from defining the objectives till implementation and review of any
planning project in the planning process. In plan preparation, the physical planning
should associate with the socio-economical, geographical, political factors, for achieving
the objective in desired direction.
The various stages of planning process is as follows:
1. Identification and definition of problems
2. Defining the objectives
3. Studies and survey
4. Analysis of data and preparation of study maps
5. Fore-casting
6. Design
7. Fixation of priorities
8. Implementation
9. Review, evaluation and feedback
The purpose of community planning is to anticipate the physical environment that will
best serve the needs of the people living and working in an urban area, and then to make
comprehensive programme to guide urban growth and renewal. There are six minimum
SETTLEMENT PATTERN
Census of India defines an Urban Area as
(i) all places with a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area
committee;
(ii) all other places which has features as
(1) a minimum population of 5000;
(2) at least 75% of the male working population engaged in non- agricultural
pursuits and
Land use would assume the following forms from the center outwards. The CBD, a zone
of transition, an area of factories and low income housing, an area of higher income
housing, and a commuter zone
There would also be declining proportions of recent immigrants, delinquency rates,
poverty and disease as distance increased from the center
Natural population increase in migration, economic growth and income expansion will all
result in each zone within the urban area ‘invading’ the next zone outwards
As the CBD expands, the locational advantages of central sites might diminish, the
transitional zone (awaiting redevelopment) might become more and more a twilight area,
and as suburban population increase, new out lying business districts may evolve. Many
criticisms can be made on the theory
Landuses within many parts of the urban area are heterogenous – shops, offices, factories
and housing may all be located close to each other, although they may have potentially
different site and locational requirements
Accessibility may be a relatively unimportant consideration for many uses, especially
housing and commercial users may find it disadvantageous to agglomerate if there is an
opportunity to corner an undeveloped market.
Decentralized shopping centers and offices may further distort the pattern, and the CBD
might experience a decrease in rents and density following the reduction in its
accessibility through congestion
The concentric zone models also ignores physical features, take little account of
industrial and railway use and disregards the effect of radial route ways upon land values
and uses
Ultimately they would be integrated into one urban area largely agglomerated by
residential use and intra-city transportation
The original nuclei would help to determine current use, for example the market town
might become the CBD, the village an outlying business district, the factory site might
evolve into an area of wholesaling and light manufacture, and the mine or waterside
facility could become an area of heavy industry
Within the urban area, compatible uses are attracted to each other- for example, low-
income residential land would be close to wholesale and light manufacturing and near
heavy industry and the medium and high-income residential areas would surround the
outlying business district. Incompatible uses would remain far apart – for example, high-
income housing and heavy manufacturing. The number of nuclei would generally be
greater in large urban areas than in small cities and there would be a greater degree of
specialization within each nucleus.
A city had grown geometrically at a rate of 7% per annum from 1991 to 2001. In the year
2001, the city had a population of 701276. The net migration rate for the city during the
above period had been 10 per thousand population. What was the net migration to the city
during 1991 to 2001
701276 = Po (1 + 7/100) 10
Po ( population in the year 1991 ) = 356493
Increase in population = Pt – Po = 701276 – 356493 = 344783
Net migration rate is 10 per 1000 i.e. 1%
Net migration to the city during 1991 to 2001 = 1% of increase in population from 1991
to 2001
= 1% of 344783
= 3447.83 ~ 3444 persons
Advantages of vertical aerial photographs over a map for its application in urban
planning
Vertical aerial photographs are taken with the axis of the air borne camera vertical (a
deviation of less than 3 degrees from the vertical is accepted). These photographs are
commonly used for mapping and interpretation purposes (gives true geometry of the
ground in the form of base map, provides information about vegetation cover, soils,
geological and geomorphologic features and drainage pattern)
Parameters to be considered for determining the sample size for a house hold survey
Level / degree of confidence (degree of accuracy of the collected sample
expressed in percentage)
Variability of the parameter
Population size
Population pyramid for an urban area with significant in-migration of working population
Population pyramid is a two dimensional pictorial representation of population
(both men and women) with the break up of different age groups, which is
prepared from the census data
The age structure of a population at a time is the result of past trends in nasality
(birth rate), mortality (death rate) and migration
The age structure of a given population has its influence on the pattern of demand
for various goods and services
By comparing two or more pyramids, changes in particular age group can create
pressure on school facilities, employment opportunities and needs for housing
units
What is GIS?
Geographic Information System Geographic Information System
A System for Managing Spatial ( Mappable) Information ) Information
More Than Just Software GIS has Five Major Components has Five Major Components
G
• • Aerial Imagery Aerial Imagery
– – High Resolution High Resolution
– – Low resolution Low resolution
• • Parcels & Right -of-Way Way
• • Parcel/Ownership Attributes Parcel/Ownership Attributes
• • Street Centerlines
Hardware
• • Computers Computers
• • Networks Networks
• • Graphic Graphic Devic
Software es
• • GIS Software GIS Software
• • Database Software Database Software
• • OS Software OS Software
• • Network rSoftware Dat
Data
• • Types of Data Types of Data
- - Vector Vector
- - Raster Data Raster Data
- - Image Data Image Data
- - Attribute Data Attribute Data
••
Where Does GIS Data Come From? Where Does GIS Data Come From?
- - In House House
- - Commercial Commercial
- - Government Government
Data aba
People People
HaAdministrators Administrators
• • Managers Managers
• • GIS Technicians GIS Technicians
Housing
The 1991 housing census for a town of 2.5 lakhs with average household size of 5
persons shows a total number of 40,000 dwelling units. If the annual exponential
population growth rate is 2.0%, what should be the average annual rate of dwelling unit
supply to meet housing shortage in 2001? Assume a constant average household size and
annual obsolescence rate of 5%
No. of Dwelling units in 1991 = population / household size = 2,50,000 / 5 = 50,000, but
as per census only 40,000 Dwelling units are there
Replacement need
Obsolescence rate is 5% i.e. 5% of houses have to be replaced every year
P(1-i)n = 40,000(1- 5/100)10 = 23,950 Dwelling units will be there after 10 years
No. of houses to be replaced = 40,000 – 23,950 =
16,050________________________________ 2
Future Demand
Demand at future date – Existing no. of dwelling units
61,070 – 40,000
21,070__________________________________________________________________
______3
Enlist special planning and design considerations for a housing complex in an earthquake
prone area
Foundation
Hard grounds are found to be suitable for all buildings
Construction of buildings on soils with low load bearing capacity and reclaimed
sites should be avoided as far as possible in seismic areas
Loose sands with high water table subjected to violent ground shaking may cause
differential settlement tilting or sinking of buildings
Constructional aspects
Proper detailing of joints (wall to roof, wall to wall, beam to column ) for all type
of construction should be made
The frame of building should have adequate ductility so as to permit energy
dissipation through plastic deformation
The major cause of damage to adobe and stone masonry buildings is the inherent
weakness of the material and inadequate binding material used in construction
against tensile and shearing stresses which developed during moderate to severe
earthquakes
Building configuration
Long building lengths subjected to differential ground vibrations ; unsymmetrical
plans susceptible for torsion are some of the major causes of earthquake damages
The plan must be symmetrical as far as possible with respect to two orthogonal
axes
The ratio of height to minimum width must be less than 2.5
The ratio of length to width must be less than 2
The plan shall not have protruding portions with dimensions larger than 20% of
the plan dimension measured parallel to the direction of the protruding portion
Excessive penetration may lead to severe damages. The total opening areas does
not exceed 20% of the plan area
Architectural features
No architectural decorative elements should be incorporated in design without
adequate structural detailing
All the interior elements like heavy shelves, false ceilings, decorative electrical
fixtures, wall tiles, claddings should be adequately tied to the supporting structure
Provision of parking space on the ground floor in multi-storeyed apartment is a
common phenomenon in most of the urban areas. This results in the presence of
soft storey at the ground level and rigid walls above
The presence of large number of water storage units increased the extent of
damage
An academic campus of 80 hectares has 30% area under student’s enclave, 25% area
under staff housing and 15% area under major roads (of which 50% is within the
academic complex). There are 5000 students and 1800 faculty and staff members having
average family size of 4.45 living in campus. Find out the gross residential population
----------------------
Total population in the residential area = 5000 (students) + 1800 (faculty & staff)
= 6800
What is incremental housing? Why it is one of the preferred options in providing housing
“a cage equipped with utilities. Residents could plug into this matrix their own units”
As the size of the family increases, depending upon the affordability the residents can
progressively develop the size of their units. Since different plans are already given to
them as how to develop the core they have options to develop their own units as per their
need.
HOUSING
DEFINITION
Housing
Household
Dwelling unit
Housing need
Housing Demand
Overall density
No. of persons per acre over a large area of town affecting the general economy
Town density
No. of persons per acre over the entire town area including residential, industrial,
commercial, educational, recreational, transportation unusable areas like river beds,
quarry pits, streams, lakes, military land
Importance of housing
A place where one can take rest, sleep and cook food. House is a part and parcel of
man's life and substantial part of man's lifetime is spent in his house.
The economic importance of housing is also very significant. It contributes to
national income, national wealth and national employment. It also serves as a good
source of revenue for central state and local governments.
In general, it can be stated that housing has potentiality to great extent in promoting
human welfare, social life, economic growth, health of community and various other
related aspects of human life.
In the First Five Year Plan (1951-56), the emphasis was given on institution building and
on construction of houses for Government employees and weaker sections. The Ministry
of Works & Housing was constituted and National Building Organisation and Town &
Country Planning Organisation were set up. A sizeable part of the plan outlay was spent
for rehabilitation of the refugees from Pakistan and on building the new city of
Chandigarh. An Industrial Housing Scheme was also initiated. The Centre subsidised
Scheme to the extent of 50% towards the cost of land and construction.
The scope of housing programme for the poor was expanded in the Second Plan (1956-
61). The Industrial Housing Scheme was widened to cover all workers. Three new
schemes were introduced, namely, Rural Housing, Slum Clearance and Sweepers
Housing. Town & Country Planning Legislations were enacted in many States and
necessary organisations were also set up for preparation of Master Plans for important
towns.
The general directions for housing programmes in the Third Plan (1961-66) were co-
ordination of efforts of all agencies and orienting the programmes to the needs of the
Low Income Groups. A Scheme was introduced in 1959 to give loans to State Govts. for
a period of 10 years for acquisition and development of land in order to make available
building sites in sufficient numbers. Master Plans for major cities were prepared and the
State capitals of Gandhi Nagar and Bhubaneswar were developed.
The balanced urban growth was accorded high priority in the Fourth Plan (1969-74). The
Plan stressed the need to prevent further growth of population in large cities and need for
decongestion or dispersal of population. This was envisaged to be achieved by creation of
smaller towns and by planning the spatial location of economic activity. Housing &
Urban Development Corporation (HUDCO) was established to fund the remunerative
housing and urban development programmes, promising a quick turnover. A Scheme for
Environmental Improvement or Urban Slums was undertaken in the Central Sector from
1972-73 with a view to provide a minimum level of services, like, water supply,
sewerage, drainage, street pavements in 11 cities with a population of 8 lakhs and above.
The scheme was later extended to 9 more cities.
The Fifth Plan (1974-79) reiterated the policies of the preceding Plans to promote smaller
towns in new urban centres, in order to ease the increasing pressure on urbanisation. This
was to be supplemented by efforts to augment civic services in urban areas with
particular emphasis on a comprehensive and regional approach to problems in
metropolitan cities. A Task Force was set up for development of small and medium
towns. The Urban Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act was enacted to prevent concentration
of land holding in urban areas and to make available urban land for construction of
houses for the middle and low income groups.
The thrust of the planning in the Sixth Plan (1980-85) was on integrated provision of
services along with shelter, particularly for the poor. The Integrated Development of
Small and Medium Towns (IDSMT) was launched in towns with population below one
lakh for provision of roads, pavements, minor civic works, bus stands, markets, shopping
complex etc. Positive inducements were proposed for setting up new industries and
commercial and professional establishments in small, medium and intermediate towns.
The Seventh Plan (1985-90) stressed on the need to entrust major responsibility of
housing construction on the private sector. A three-fold role was assigned to the public
sector, namely, mobilisation for resources for housing, provision for subsidised housing
for the poor and acquisition and development of land. The National Housing Bank was
set up to expand the base of housing finance. NBO was reconstituted and a new
organisation called Building Material Technology Promotion Council (BMTPC) was set
up for promoting commercial production of innovative building materials. A network of
Building Centres was also set up during this Plan period. The Seventh Plan explicitly
recognised the problems of the urban poor and for the first time an Urban Poverty
Alleviation Scheme known as Urban Basic Services for the Poor (UBSP) was launched.
As a follow-up of the Global Shelter Strategy (GSS), National Housing Policy (NHP)
was announced in 1988. The long term goal of the NHP was to eradicate houselessness,
improve the housing conditions of the inadequately housed and provide a minimum level
of basic services and amenities to all. The role of Government was conceived, as a
provider for the poorest and vulnerable sections and as a facilitator for other income
groups and private sector by the removal of constraints and the increased supply of land
and services.
The National Commission of Urbanisation submitted its report. The Report eloquently
pointed out the reality of continuing and rapid growth of the urban population as well as
the scale and intensity of urbanisation, the critical deficiencies in the various items of
infrastructure, the concentration of vast number of poor and deprived people, the acute
disparities in the access of shelter and basic services, deteriorating environmental quality
and the impact of poor governance on the income and the productivity of enterprises.
In the backdrop of this report the Eighth Plan (1992-97) for the first time explicitly
recognised the role and importance of urban sector for the national economy. While
growth rate of employment in the urban areas averaged around 3.8% per annum, it
dropped to about 1.6% in the rural areas. Therefore, the urban areas have to be enabled to
absorb larger increments to the labour force. The Plan identified the key issues in the
emerging urban scenario:
the widening gap between demand and supply of infrastructural services badly
hitting the poor, whose access to the basic services like drinking water, sanitation,
education and basic health services is shrinking
unabated growth of urban population aggravating the accumulated backlog of
housing shortages, resulting in proliferation of slums and squatter settlement and decay of
city environment
high incidence of marginal employment and urban poverty as reflected in NSS
43 rd round that 41.8 million urban people lived below the poverty line.
The response of the Plan to this scenario was the launching of Urban Poverty and
Alleviation Programme of Nehru Rojgar Yojana (NRY)
The housing problems in urban and rural areas are different because of the following
facts
Availability of land
Availability of materials
Availability of technical supervision
Economic conditions
Living habits
Social obligations
Rural housing
India is a developing country with nearly 700 thousand villages with the main activity of
the people as agriculture. It is therefore necessary to give serious thought to the overall
development of villages also. The design of rural housing should be based on
characteristics of typical Indian village life and at the same time, the constructional
features should correspond to the available men and materials. The central building
research institute, roorkee has developed various techniques to make the rural housing
schemes as economical as possible. These techniques include the production of building
materials by using locally available raw materials and the building procedures can also be
easily carried out by the locally available labor commensurate with the structural stability
and durability aspects of the project.
The rural housing policy should be based on the following three principles
1. Economic development
It should be seen that there is all round economic development of the rural areas,
which will help the villagers to maintain their houses and to repay the loans taken by
them without much hardship. If possible, efforts should be made to obtain subsidies
wither from government or other voluntary organisations to reduce the burden of the
poor class people of villages.
2. Improvement
The existing unfit rural houses should either be improved or reconstructed and for this
purpose, the improvement scheme should be spread over a long period, say 10 to 15
years
3. Self-help
The element of self-help should be added to bring down the cost of housing unit.
However adequate technical guidance should be made available.
Following points should be considered at the time of selection of villages for housing
project
The villages having population of backward class with bad living conditions should
be given first chance
The villages which are flood affected and which are proposed to be rebuilt on sites
free from damage of floods should be given preference
The villages which have become congested due to over-population should be selected
For selecting villages under the improvement programme, the following factors should be
considered
The majority of residents should be willing to improve or rebuild their houses on self-
help basis and in accordance with the master plan prepared by the authority taking
due care of existing trees, wells pucca houses monuments etc.
The village should offer voluntarily the sites for setting up co-operative brick kilns
tiles preparation joinery lime manufacture, etc.
Government
To provide housing on a large scale and even at subsidised rates, the supreme agency
would naturally be government and semi-government bodies or departments.
It is to be confessed that the principle of state assistance for housing though unsound
in nature is unavoidable under the present condition. It is for this reason that such
assistance
Co-operative housing societies
Individuals
HUDCO
It was setup in 1970 with the aim of promoting housing and urban development
programmes in the country. HUDCO serves as the apex control agency for mobilisation
of financial resources for housing and urban development programmes. The funds so
generated are used by HUDCO for housing schemes of better quality houses for sale to
the public on liberal terms and conditions
The important borrowers from HUDCO are housing boards development authorities
improvement trusts municipal corporations public sector undertakings private sector
bodies, semi-govt. and govt. agencies private builders, etc. However the housing boards
generally consume half of the total loan advanced by HUDCO. HUDCO has identified
more housing agencies and as a result of this policy the number of housing agencies,
which was only 12 in 1972, has gone up as high as 149 in 1981. The schemes financed by
HUDCO are now spread over 381 towns and hundreds of villages
The lending rate of interest charged by HUDCO varies with the nature of scheme for
which loan is to be advanced. It looks with sympathy for the schemes, which are floated
for the economically weaker section of the society, and it thus helps the under-privileged
people substantially.
One of the main objectives of HUDCO is also to finance or undertake the setting up of
building material industries because of the fact that building materials constitute about
70% of the total cost of construction. It is therefore necessary to ensure a steady flow of
essential building materials at reasonable prices especially to build houses for people of
economically weaker sections and low-income group categories. Hence, to encourage the
establishment of building material, industrial units, HUDCO advances loan on liberal
grounds with low rate of interest.
HUDCO has been in the forefront of Government’s efforts to come to the aid of disaster
affected household, and has provided financial assistance for disaster rehabilitation
housing to the tune of Rs. 2360 cores for construction of over 40 lakhs houses for
earthquake, cyclone, and flood victims.
HUDCO also promotes and provides consultancy services to help housing agencies to
design low cost housing schemes, commercial projects townships and various other
projects connected with housing and urban development programmes.
For a sector of 2Km X 1Km size and gross density of 350 ppha, what will be the net
density if non-residential land use constitutes 30% of land area?
An academic campus of 80 hectares has 30% area under student’s enclave, 25% area
under staff housing and 15% area under major roads (of which 50% is within the
academic complex). There are 5000 students and 1800 faculty and staff members having
average family size of 4.45 living in campus. Find out the gross residential population
Total population in the residential area = 5000 (students) + 1800 (faculty & staff)
= 6800
The 1991 housing census for a town of 2.5 lakhs with average household size of 5
persons shows a total number of 40,000 dwelling units. If the annual exponential
population growth rate is 2.0%, what should be the average annual rate of dwelling unit
supply to meet housing shortage in 2001? Assume a constant average household size and
annual obsolescence rate of 5%
No. of Dwelling units in 1991 = population / household size = 2,50,000 / 5 = 50,000, but
as per census only 40,000 Dwelling units are there
Replacement need
Obsolescence rate is 5% i.e. 5% of houses have to be replaced every year
P(1-i)n = 40,000(1- 5/100)10 = 23,950 Dwelling units will be there after 10 years
No. of houses to be replaced = 40,000 – 23,950 =
16,050________________________________ 2
Future Demand
Demand at future date – Existing no. of dwelling units
61,070 – 40,000
21,070__________________________________________________________________
______3
Enlist special planning and design considerations for a housing complex in an earthquake
prone area
Foundation
Hard grounds are found to be suitable for all buildings
Construction of buildings on soils with low load bearing capacity and reclaimed
sites should be avoided as far as possible in seismic areas
Loose sands with high water table subjected to violent ground shaking may cause
differential settlement tilting or sinking of buildings
Constructional aspects
Proper detailing of joints (wall to roof, wall to wall, beam to column ) for all type
of construction should be made
What is incremental housing? Why it is one of the preferred options in providing housing
“a cage equipped with utilities. Residents could plug into this matrix their own units”
As the size of the family increases, depending upon the affordability the residents can
progressively develop the size of their units. Since different plans are already given to
them as how to develop the core they have options to develop their own units as per their
need.
Housing
Minimum plinth area per dwelling 32.5 sq.m
Minimum floor area per dwelling 23.25 sq.m
Minimum size of dwelling 2 living rooms, kitchen and bath
Desirable persons per room 2.0
Density of dwellings:
Area Dwelling units per hectare
Low density area 25
Medium density area 50
High density area 75
Average density of dwellings 40 to 50
Average size of family 5 persons
Slum
UNESCO defines “a slum is a building, a group of buildings, or area characterized by
over crowding, deterioration, unsanitary conditions or absence of facilities or amenities
which because of these conditions or any of them, endanger the health, safety or moral of
it inhabitants or community. The highest degree of general crime and gangsterism is in
the central city slums
Slums may be broadly defined as an area with untidy and ill ventilated residences without
proper sanitation and water supply. In slum and blighted areas we can find “submerged
humanity” and social disorganization. Poor mostly inhabit these areas.
Blight
Any area or a part of urban or rural in deterioration is called “Blighted area irrespective
of its degree of deterioration”
The blight may be in physical conditions such as topological blight, or economic blight as
the semi or full deterioration of commercial activities in that area.
Obsolescence
It can be defined as an associate of blights and slums, since the basic nature is same for
all. An area which is unfit for the present use either due to the change in the pattern of
living or due to cultural or economic changes is called “obsolescent area”
Formation of squatters
New group seek entry in development process of any settlement create a new type of
residential settlement coordination and contrast to that of old urban groups. Operation
takes place in groups initially consisting of relatives and kin or members from same
caste, district region or language. This process involves illegal occupancy or squatting as
public or private lands. These are autonomous settlements, which are manifestation of
uncontrolled urban growth. Major characteristic ‘neo rural’ or village like pattern sine the
dwellers follow traditional procedures. Land of little public utility along drainage line,
railway line or land with difficult access, on the ridge, or on awkward shaped lands in
unattractive surrounding.
Causes of slum
Decentralisation – rich and middle class move to extended portion of town, but poor?
Economic conditions – umemployment and growth of population
Education – lack of education – dragged into social evils
Improper use of land
Industrialisation – slums are direct evil result form industrialization
Lack of zoning – random development
Migration
Powers of local authority – if authority do not possess adequate powers to control the
development of the town
Envisage provision of lavatories, potable water, drains, roads and streetlights in slums.
3 Features :
Comprehensive approach
Loan assistance
Beneficiary participation
Provides basic amenities on a higher scale than slum improvement programme
Concept of value is the main spine of argument between Turner and Burgess
Turner (use value) Burgess (market value)
Housing is a means of personal Does not view housing outside
expression economic marketing process
A result of an incremental process House is a commodity that has market
A process not a product value
Density 25 – 40 / hectare
Road width 7.5m min. on new sites
4.5 m on existing built up sites
Plot size 140 sq.m (min)
Min width of plot 9m
Plot coverage upto 360 sq.m 50%
Above 360 sq.m 50% for first 360 sq.m and 33% for
remaining
Plinth height for the main house 30cm
for the main house with poor 45 cm
drainage or which is susceptible to flood
for cattle shed 15cm
Setback front 3m
Side - upto 160 sq.m. plot 1.5m
Above 160 sq.m. plot 2.4m
Ht of floor for flat roof 2.75m clear
For sloped roof 2.25m at the lowest point
Room size for two room tenements 9 sq.m.
Min. width 2.5 m
Kitchen 4.5 sq.m.
Min. width 1.8 m
Bath 1.8 sq.m.
Ventilation – general 8% of floor area
In warm humid climate 10% of floor area
Distance of cattle shed and latrine from 4.5m to 6m
habitable space
Size of latrine 2.1 sq.m
Min. width 1.8 m
Water supply – individual or group supply Within a distance of 7.5m
Disposal of sullage Soakpit or kitchen garden
Size of door clear ht 1.8m
Clear width 0.75m
There are six rural development centers attached to engineering colleges to study rural
housing and in turn help NBO in formulating standards
A loan of Rs. 8,00,000 has been granted by a financial institution to an individual for the
construction of his house. The loan has to be repaid by way of annuity at the rate of
13.5% interest per annum un 15 equal installments from the year in which the loan is
taken by the house owner. Calculate the yearly installment for repaying the loan
The general formula for the future value of a single flow is
S = P (1+i)n where
To calculate the yearly installment, the future value of annuity has to be equated to the
general formula for the future value
R { ( [1+i] n – 1 ) / i } = P (1+i)n
Illustrate any one of the best examples of residential sector planning in post independent
new towns of India
Residential sector in chandigarh
The basic planning unit of the city is a sector, 800 by 1200 metres with a
population varying between 3,000 and 20,000, depending upon the size of the
plots and the topography of the area
The dimensions of the sector are derived from a “modular” conception. Corbusier
established a distance of 400 metres as a sort of outer limit of modular perception
a distance beyond which measures could not be readily grasped.
Each sector is based on the concept of a neighbourhood unit which ensures
necessities like shops, educational institutions, health centers, places of recreation
and worship within a walkable distance
City planning
EGYPTIAN PERIOD
Settlements were located on river banks which were subjected to flood and hence
impact of straight lines and parallel lines were derived by receding lines of flood
water which were parallel and also almost straight as the river Nile
Transportation within the settlement was probably on foot, but inter-settlement
movement was by river
Changing flood level of river needed some protection wall on the river from side
of a settlement
Central spine of transportation was on surface and not water as the river was wide
and settlements grew only on one side of the river
The technology of stone cutting and curving and the tremendous pomp’s and
splendors of the pharaohs led to advanced construction technologies
MOHENJODARA
No fortification
Major streets in the N-S direction
Broadly at right angles
Streets within built-up areas were narrow
Zoning was distinct for distinct groups, commerce at the meeting of east road and
first street, near palace
Three broad divisions of the settlement:
o The religious, institutional and cultural areas - around monastery and great
bath in the western part including temple.
o The northern part - principally for agriculture and industries
o The southern part – principally for administration, trade and commerce
Construction technique was very well advanced:
o Buildings were of masonry construction (sun-dried bricks)
o Ranging from two rooms to mansions with many rooms
o Underground sewerage and drainage from houses
o Pumps (helical) to pump water in great bath
o Principal buildings were monastery and bath – indicating the influence of
religion as a culture (not for defense)
Development of art and craft, science and technology: excellent way of
adjustment to contours
CRETE CIVILIZATION
GOURNIA
Houses upto 3 storeys for palace with living room, bedroom, store, kitchen, toilet,
luxury room
Colonnades timber light wells in the middle windows recessed
Roads were paved with underground drainage, roads were narrow, 10’ to 12’
wide, stepped where needed
GREEK CIVILIZATION
They had conscious attempt of Town planning: Hippodamus, the town planner
Building standards: houses were to be of same size (say 50’x50,) block within
which variations may occur
MILETUS
Destroyed in 16th century by Persians who occupied Greece.
Rebuilt in 5 th century
Extensive, regularized form of chess-board planning, an outstanding event in
town building history
Skill and imagination extraordinarily applied in its adaptation to a peninsular site
Two main divisions of the city
Agora was a plan disposition, an example of dignity and coherence of
arrangement
The community zone had markets, temples, council house, sota (gymnasium),
shops, colonnades
Importance attached to placing and planning of dwelling houses
Profuse use of marbles in construction of public buildings
Excellent space organization and space articulation
SELINUS 700B.C
Fairly high level plateau about 100 ft above sea level
Land surrounded by sea and river on three sides
Central spine road and two cross-roads about 25’ wide
Central area – temple agora location
Due importance given to the roads that connect the detached temple group on the
eastern hill – an unusual feature of selinus
The layout is rectilinear, rather than chess-board, and shows remarkable
adaptation to the circumstances and coherence of arrangement
Its situation, planning and architectural developments were excellent
Courtyard planning for houses, less class distinction, brick and tile roofing and
wooden structure, narrow alleys between roads for drainage, frontage upon 16’
wide roads
The philosophy was of special attention to the public buildings and not houses,
the principle was like precinct planning
Northern extension later for principally commercial activities – a good historical
evidence of an expanding city with expanding commercial activities
ROMAN PERIOD
All construction within the town was to be of concrete (lime) and stone, and in specific
cases they might be faced by bricks
Regional considerations:
Town, which is congested, should be freed of surplus population, which should
then be housed in a new place. The towns should be so situated as they would be
in a position to help each other.
There should be a ‘sangrahan’ among ten villages, a ‘sarvatik’ among two
hundred, a ‘dronamukh’ among four hundred and a ‘sthaniya’ among eight
hundred villages.
People who come to stay at the time of a new settlement or those who come to
reside later in this new settlement should be exempted from payment of taxes for
some years. In the new village, there should be higher proportion of agriculturists
and shudras. There should be a market provided for the sale of goods received
from traders on highways.
Dams should be constructed over river nalas. Temples and gardens should be
provided. Arrangements should be made for looking after the aged, the children
and informal persons. Cereals and wealth will grow if the agriculturists are kept
busy. Attempts should be made to protect and increase quarries, forests and
canals.
Town planning:
A city should be located in the central part of a country to facilitate trade and
commerce.
The site selected for the purpose of this city should be quite large in area, and on
the banks of a river, or by the side of an artificial or natural lake, which never
goes dry.
Its shape should be circular, rectangular or square as would suit the topography.
There should be water on all sides.
Separate areas should be provided for marketing different goods.
There should be a wall around the town, which should be six dandas high and
twelve dandas wide.
Beyond this wall there should be three moats of 14 feet, 12 feet and 10 feet wide
to be constructed four arm-lengths apart. The depth should be three-fourth of
width.
Three east - west and three North – south roads, should divide the town. The main
roads should be eight dandas wide and other roads four dandas wide.
The palace should be in the central part. It should face either north or east.
The houses of priests and ministers should be on the south-east, traders, skilled
workers, and kshatriyas on the east, the treasury, goldsmiths and industries on the
south, forest produce on the northeast and doctors city fathers, army commander,
artists, on the south.
Temples should be located in the center of the town.
Cemeteries should be located on the north and east of the town, that for the higher
caste to be located on the south.
The depressed classes should be housed beyond cemetery. There should be one
well for every group of ten houses.
Housing
Foundation of houses should be two arm lengths deep. Every house should be
provided with a latrine and a well
For festivals, special bathrooms and toilet rooms should be constructed.
The water should be drained by means of a Nala having sufficient slope.
The open space between two houses and two balconies should be four feet lengths
wide.
The front door should be four-foot lengths wide. There should be no obstruction
to the door shutter opening inside.
To ensure lighting of the room a small window should be provided high up in the
wall. Roof should stand rains.
Those who obstruct steps, Nahanis, or cause any damage to the walls of building
due to sullage water or dirty water, they will be severely punished.
A drain must be provided for carrying away wastewater, it should have an
adequate velocity.
Those who throw waste on the streets will be severely punished.
The bathrooms, latrines, grinding place and open spaces, excluding special halls
and rooms must be made available for the common use of all tenants, in the
house.
Those who will leave the house for their own accord must pay a year’s rent to the
landlord.
A census should be taken of all men and women wherein information should be
noted down about the caste, Gotra, occupation, income and expenditure. For
summer season, arrangements should be kept ready for attending to extinguishing
of fires.
SAMRAT ASHOK
The Mauryan Empire attained its maximum glory in the time of Samrat Ashok. The
empire covered the whole of India (except Assam and some southern part) Afghanistan,
Baluchistan, Kashmir and Nepal. He became the champion of Buddhism and engraved
principles of this religion on pillars rocks and caves in the various parts reference has
already made in the last chapter to the numerous viharas built by him especially in
Magadha, now known as Bihar on this account. He also dug wells; planted trees built rest
houses and hospitals. The Ashok pillar at Sarnath, bearing a Lion and a wheel has been
incorporated in the National Flag of free India to signify unit of India prevailing in Ashok
period. The Mauryan Empire was divided into provinces, cities and Municipalities.
Village administration was in the hands of ‘Gramics’. For ten villages there was a ‘Gopa’
and above him a ‘sthanika’. Taxes collected from citizens were spent on public welfare
works such as tree plantation, digging of lakes, and constructing rest houses and hospitals
KING VIKRAMADITYA
King Vikramaditya was a great patron of learning and nine great scholars called
‘Navratnas (nine jewels) adorned his court. The celebrated kalidas, poet and dramatist
was one of them classical Sanskrit reached wonderful heights of its glory. Cities like
Ujjain, pataliputra (patna), Mathura and sharavati become great centers of learning and
culture. Fa Hein, a Chinese traveler who visited India during the fourth century A.D.
writes that ‘the government was liberal. People had enough food clothes and housing.
They lived an easy and a comfortable life. Wealth was multiplied by industry and trade.
Art and architecture entered a classical stage. Caves at Ajantha and Yellora with their
world famous paintings belong to this period. The famous Iron pillar at Delhi near Qutb
Minar was cast by Kumar gupta in the fifth century A.D.
MANASARA VASTUSHASTRA
Another elaborate treatise on town planning in ancient India. It is perhaps of a later date –
about 6th century A.D. There are several chapters in this book on town planning and
construction of buildings. One interesting feature however deserves special mention.
There are eight different types of towns and villages according to the shapes:
Dandaka
Sarvathobhadra
Nandyavarta
Padmaka
Swastika
Prastara
Karmuka
Chaturmukha
Dandaka
Dandaka type of town plan provides for two main entrance gates and is generally
adopted for the formation of small towns and villages, the village offices being
located in the east.
The female deity of the village or the chamadevata will generally be located
outside the village and the male deities in the northern portion.
Sarvathobhadra
This type of town plan is applicable to larger villages and towns, which have to be
constructed on a square sites.
According to this plan, the whole town should be fully occupied by houses of
various descriptions and inhabited by all classes of people.
The temple dominates the village.
Nandyavarta
This plan is commonly used for the construction of towns and not for villages.
It is generally adopted for the sites either circular or square, with not less than
three thousand houses, but not more than four thousand.
The streets run parallel to the central adjoining streets with the temple of the
presiding deity in the center of the town.
“Nandyavarta” is the name of a flower, the form of which is followed in this
layout.
Padmaka
This type of plan was practiced for building of the towns with fortress all round.
The pattern of the plan resembles the petals of lotus radiating outwards from the
center.
The city used to be practically an island surrounded by water, having no scope for
expansion
Swastika
Swastika type of plan contemplates some diagonal streets dividing the site into
certain triangular plots.
The site need not be marked out into a square or rectangle and it may be of any
shape.
A rampart wall surrounds the town, with a moat at its foot filled with water.
Two main streets cross each other at the center, running south to north and west to
east.
Prastara
The characteristic feature of this plan is that the site may be either square or
rectangular but not triangular or circular.
The sites are set apart for the poor, the middle class, the rich and the very rich, the
sizes of the sites increasing according to the capacity of each to purchase or build
upon.
The main roads are much wider compared to those of other patterns.
The town may or may not be surrounded by a fort.
Karmuka
This plan is suitable for the place where the site of the town is in the form of a
bow or semi-circular or parabolic and mostly applied for towns located on the
seashore or riverbanks.
The main streets of the town run from north to south or east to west and the cross
streets run at right-angles to them, dividing the whole area into blocks.
The presiding deity, commonly a female deity, is installed in the temple build in
any convenient place.
Chaturmukha
Chaturmukha type of plan is applicable to all towns starting from the largest town
to the smallest village.
The site may be either square or rectangular having four faces.
The town is laid out east to west lengthwise, with four main streets.
The temple of the presiding deity will be always at the center.
The Vastupurusha Mandala offered the formula to determine the functions of the
building in relation to its orientation.
The Vasturatnakara assigns specific functions to each direction.
The southeast for example, is dedicated to fire and northeast to the element Water.
Invariably, the correspondence with the elements would determine the position of
the rooms in the house.
The space assigned to the region of fire, for instance, would be used for building a
kitchen or reserved as a source for heat and warmth.
The Mandala also served as a guide to locate the buildings on site and
determining the position of the shrines in a temple complex.
MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Towns were walled and fortified – like an island in a hostile world
Founded on irregular terrains, occupying hill tops or islands
Built by merchant, craftsmen and shopkeepers against deudalism. Hence, local
loyalties grew up
Irregular road pattern inside the fortification wall to confuse the invaders; but
roads were paved
The most commanding position was occupied by the church
The city council of the merchants and craftsmen and the role in administration
and civic and cultural life developed local patriotism
Merchants love in gain or profit manifestation expanding benefit of fellow
citizens, - building churches, founding hospitals buying off market tolls
A new dimension of civic spaces emerged
The most common meeting place was in the market square.
Civic buildings were around it
Open spaces, the piazza, the plaza, the place, were very common
Characteristics of Medieval open spaces:
o Demarcated by a continuous row of public buildings
o Monuments, statuary, etc. will stand off the main streets
o Sides are, or appear to be, closed
o Visual expression of formality
o Proportion was to enhance principal buildings; width was not less than
twice the height
Houses were simple, living and sleeping spaces were in the upp0er floor, the
ground floor used for storage, workshops and kitchen
Waste disposal within houses rarely provided (only some had privies)
Thatch – covered roof, sometimes fire-proof roofs
Streets were usually paved and maintained by the owner of the property facing
upon them
MUGHAL PERIOD
In contrast to the builders of cities like Mohenjo-daro and Harappa or the Hindu sthapatis
who right down to modern times designed villages upon a magic grid diagram, Islamic
architects frequently left the layout of streets to chance or allowed this to develop
organically as the settlement grew in size.
It was not until the sixteenth century that one Islamic ruler in India, the great Mughal
Akbar, took on the task of planning an entire residential town, comprising palaces,
Mosques, or travelers bungalow etc. His old residence of Agra could not be expanded any
further owing to the unfavourable terrain and dusty jumble of houses. Hence, he decided
to move his residence from Agra to an n auspicious mountain, Sikri where a hermit
FATEHPUR SIKRI
Fatehpur sikri had a rectangular town hall with it longer side running parallel to
the line of the ridge.
Along its axis i.e., from northeast to southwest ran the principle thoroughfare,
which led to the highest part of the ridge where the palace stood.
A wall only on three sides to the northeast in enclosed the town fronted on a lake,
formed artificially in some low-lying ground by damming a river.
Today the lake had dried up and the houses of the townsfolk on either side of the
ridge have disappeared.
For shortage of water compelled the emperor and his suite to leave these buildings
after they had been occupied for less than two decades.
The plan shows that all the buildings do not fit in with the general orientation of
the town.
The caravan serais, mint, treasury and baths, located on the hillside follow the
natural contours i.e., the axis of the town.
The mosque had to be oriented towards Mecca.
Since the plateau extends from the southwest to the northeast and the ideal
orientation ran from north to south, the different courts had to be staggered one
behind the other.
Hence in Mughal period cities like Agra, Delhi was re-developed. Fatehpur sikri was
entirely planned. Fortification was strengthened in Bijapur, Lucknow. They built
many forts in places like Agra, Delhi and developed beautiful ornamental gardens
popularly known as ‘Mughal Gardens’ some of them are still in good conditions, for
e.g. Kabul Bagh at panipat by Babur, Shalimar Bagh and Nishat Bagh by shah Jahan,
Lal Bagh by Haider Ali. In the same period, other rulers also built beautiful cities like
Jaipur and Vijayanagar with new concepts of town planning.
JAIPUR CITY
The city of jaipur can be described perhaps the only solitary example of a planned
city. It was originally conceived and laid out by the Rajput king Maharajah
Jaisingh in the eighteenth century. The city was built in 1753 within six years of
the laying of its foundation stone on a carefully prepared plan, with broad avenues
and public buildings.
But it is to sawai Ramsingh that the credit of making jaipur a world-famous city;
he gave the city its universal pink colour; he founded all the Institutions by which
Jaipur came to be ranked amongst the most progressive princely stats in India.
Jaipur had originally well laid out roads with ‘Geometric precision and
Arithmetical accuracy’, with symmetrical open squares and fountains lined with
uniform buildings
FACTORY TOWN
In 1816, Robert Owen, an industrialist in England proposed a plan of a community
that could be
Self-supporting and reduce the cost of relief which was very heavy and with
Large central open space for community buildings
Surrounding the dwellings were large gardens
Surrounding the center were dwellings
Main roads encircle the entire compound
The factories and workshops were outside the community across the main roads
The entire compound surrounded by agricultural area of 1000 to 1500 acres
Total community areas was to be of 50 to 100 acres
Total population = 1200 or so
It was a plan for a co-operative community combining industry and agriculture
GARDEN CITY
A town designed for healthy living and industry.
Town of a size that makes possible a full measure of social life, but not larger
Land will remain in a single ownership of the community or held in trust for the
community.
Not a colony, but a complete working city of population about 30,000
A large central park containing public buildings
Central park surrounded by a shopping street
Central park and shopping street are surrounded by dwellings in all directions – at
density of 12 families / acre
The outer circle of factories and industries
The whole is surrounded by a permanent green belt of 5000 acres
The town area is of about 1000 acres
In 1899, the garden city association was formed.
In 1903 – Letch worth started, 35 miles from London, town area: about 500 acres,
designed for 35,000 persons, 3,000 acres of green belt. By 1947 it had about
16,000 populations and about 100 factories.
In 1920 – Welwyn started 2400 acres, 40000 persons design capacity. By 1947, it had
about 18,000 population and 70 factories.
By keeping the land in single ownership, the possibility of speculation and
overcrowding would be eliminated and the increment of value created by the
community in the industrial and commercial (shops) sets would be preserved for
it-self.
PATRICK GEDDES
A Scot who has been called the father of modern town planning, Geddes did
much of his pioneering work in the Old Town of Edinburgh, having made his
married home there in 1886.
Geddes’ name and spirit are imperishably associated with Ramsay Garden and the
Outlook Tower, both in Castle hill.
Geddes was concerned with the relationship between people and cities and how
they affect one another. He emphasized that people do not merely needed shelter, but
also food and work, the recreation and social life. This makes the house an
inseparable part of the neighbourhood, the city and the surrounding open country and
the region.
The town planning primarily meant establishing organic relationship among ‘Folk,
place and work’, which corresponds to triad (Geddesian triad) of organism,
function and environment.
FOLK WORK PLACE
I.e. organism i.e. function i.e. environment
(Social aspect) (Economical aspect) (Physical aspect)
“Cities in Evolution’ – published in 1915 – essence of the book – city beautiful
movement and too many small schemes here and there like garden cities were
only poor examples of town planning.
In this book he coined the term “Conurbation” to describe the waves of population
inflow to large cities, followed by overcrowding and slum formation, and then the
wave of backflow – the whole process resulting in amorphous sprawl, waste, and
unnecessary obsolescence.
True rural development, true urban planning, true city design have little in common
and repeating the same over all the three was disastrous and economically
wasteful
Each valid scheme should and must embody the full utilization of its local and
regional conditions
Geddes was the originator of the idea and technique of Regional survey and city
survey
The sequence of planning is to be:
i. Regional survey
ii. Rural development
iii. Town planning
iv. City design
The tower was conceived as a tool for regional analysis, index-museum and the
‘world’s first sociological laboratory’. It represents the essence of Geddes’s thought -
his holism, visual thinking, and commitment to understanding the city in the region.
PATRICK GEDDES IN INDIA
He came to India in 1915 at the invitation of Lord Pent land, the then Governor of
Madras. He gave his expert advice for the improvement of about eighteen major towns in
India.
He laid emphasis on “Survey before plan” i.e. diagnosis before treatment to make a
correct diagnosis of various ills from which the town suffers and then prescribe the
correct remedies for its cure. These are the physical and social economic surveys.
He was the first man who introduced the sociological concept in the town planning.
Before coming to India, he had successfully overcome the horrors of Edinborough slums.
LEWIS MUMFORD
CLARENCE A. PERRY
He laid down the fundamental elements on which he intended the neighbourhood unit
should be based size, boundaries open spaces, institutional sites, local shops and internal
road system. Its six basic principles were:
1. The size should be related to the catchment area of an elementary school.
2. The residential area should be bounded on all sides by arterial streets; there should be
no through traffic.
3. There should be ample provision of small parks and play areas.
4. There should be a central point to the neighbourhood containing the school and other
services.
5. District shops should be located on the periphery, thus serving approximately four
neighbourhoods.
6. There should be a hierarchy of streets facilitating access but discouraging through
traffic.
DOXIADIS, CONSTANTINOS A
Doxiadis most important contribution to architectural and planning thought was the
development of ekistics.
The attempt to arrive at a proper conception and implementation of the facts, concepts
and ideas related to human settlements, and the attempt to re-examine all principles and
theories and to readjust the disciplines and professions connected with settlements, led to
the need for a special discipline of human settlements, the discipline of Ekistics.
Since one of the major problem faced was the merging of settlements into much larger
and complicated organisms, Doxiadis at the Athens center of Ekistics was working on an
attempt to foresee where human settlements are going in the future. It seems that they
will merge into ever-larger groupings, which will become a continuous universal
settlement, the universal city or Ecumenopolis.
Doxiadis said “When we try to classify the settlements according to their dimensions, we
will soon realise that they do not belong to easily definable categories of sizes but spread
over the whole spectrum of possible sizes. Any such division will, therefore, have to be
somewhat arbitrary, but it must also be an inherently satisfying and reasonable one.
Such a division has been worked out based on empirical experience and is presented in a
logarithmic scale.
The smallest unit of measurement is Man. He does not form a settlement in himself since
he is one of its elements, but he does have a shell (his clothing is the smallest possible
human shell and personal furniture plays the same role) and he is the Basic and
indispensable unit of measurement. The second smallest unit is a normal room. From this
we go to a dwelling, a group of several dwellings, a small neighbourhood, a
neighbourhood, a small town, a town, a city, a metropolis, a conurbation, a megalopolis,
an urban region, an urbanized continent, until, finally, we reach the largest conceivable
space for a settlement, which is the whole Earth.
This Ekistics Logarithmic Scale (ELS) can be presented graphically in several ways. One
way is based on the areas covered by the different units(area ELS), another way is based
on the number of people corresponding to each unit (population ELS).
The ELS consist of 15 Ekistics units ranging from Man to Ecumenopolis and these units
in turn belong to four basic groups
Minor shells, or elementary units (man, room, house)
Micro-settlements, the units smaller than, or as small as, the traditional town where
people used to and still do achieve interconnection by walking
Meso-settlements, between the traditional town and the conurbation within which one
can commute daily
Macro-settlements, whose largest possible expression is the Ecumenopolis.
LE CORBUSIER
In the early twenties, Le Corbusier realized that many cities around the world were on
the brink of an urban implosion due to poor design, inadequate housing and
inefficient transportation. He studied these problems and advised bold new
solutions.
His theories helped shape the planning of many cities of the world, and the influence
they exerted on a new generation of architects and planners is legendary.
He conceived plans for Algiers, Nemours, the university city of Brazil, Buenos
Aires (Argentina), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Barcelona (Spain), Geneva(
Switzerland), Stockholm (Sweden) and Antwerp (Belgium)
His plans for cities were the result of a detailed analysis of three major urban factors –
roads, housing and open spaces.
He felt that roads should be arranged on the ‘grid – iron’ pattern with minimum
crossings. Consequently, segregation of different forms of traffic was inevitable.
He recommended skyscrapers for commercial and residential purposes, surrounded
by large open spaces or parks.
He claimed that on an average nearly 90 percent of the ground area of his modern city
would consist of open spaces encompassing residential areas. He called his city
‘One Great Park’ with a lot of greenery around the buildings.
‘The city of Tomorrow’ for 30,00,000 people was proposed by Le Corbusier in 1922,
which was based on four principles :
This scheme was a city of magnificent skyscraper towers surrounded by broad and
sweeping open space.
The city was a huge park. Sixty-story office buildings accommodating 1,200 people
per acre and covering only 5% of the ground area were grouped in the heart of the
city
The hub of the plan is the transportation centre for motor, and rail lines, the roof of
which is the air – field. Main highways are elevated.
Surrounding the skyscrapers was the apartment district, eight-story buildings arranged
in zigzag rows with broad open spaces about them, the density of population
being 120 persons per acre.
Lying about the outskirts were the garden cities of single-family houses.
The residential zone contains schools, shopping centers, and recreational facilities.
sir Edwin Lutyens, assisted by Baker. The capital group of building like Government
House, council hall, and secretariat were designed. Industrial buildings were separated
from residential sector and arranged around the commercial and civic buildings. It was
more a planning and designing of Administrative center than a new town as such, and
was mostly copied from their experience back home.
In India, the socialist orientation of the government made it strongly receptive to the
concept of large-scale planning and its first five-year plan called for a national town and
country-planning act. Individual states were empowered to planning legislation as well as
machinery for its implementation. Administrative progress was slow because of lack of
Indian town planners. To remedy this, the government encouraged the establishment of
academic programs in this field and thus in 1949 a department of Architecture and
country planning was created by the Bengal Engineering College. The Department of
architecture and Regional planning begun in 1955 by IIT kharagpur. The school of Town
and country planning was established by the government in New Delhi and was
subsequently attached to the University of Delhi as school of planning and Architecture.
In the years following independence, India’s major cities were subjected to numerous
studies, surveys, projection recommendations, and long-range plans. Planning
documents, frequently prepared with the help of foreign consultants, reflected attempts to
summarize information, analyses problems and suggest directions for future urban
development. A series of tentative planning efforts culminated in the establishment of
Development Authorities in metropolitan cities of Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras.
Dominant in western planning at this time was the concept of decentralization through
regional development. It was hoped that through systems such a planned satellite towns,
excessive congestion could be avoided and balanced patterns of residence and
employment established. A particular focus of attention among planners in the 1950 was
the New towns program in Britain, where the growth of London was guided by means of
a green belt surrounded by a series of new urban centers.
Many industrial towns were planned after Post – Independence period. A few of these are
1. STEEL TOWNS
Durgapur West Bengal
Bhilai Madya pradesh
Rourkela Orissa
Salem Tamil Nadu
2. INDUSTRIAL TOWNS
Jamshedpur Bihar
Bhadravati Karnataka
Gandhinagar Gujarat
3. CAPITAL CITIES
Chandigarh Union territory
Gandhinagar Gujarat
An art of shaping and guiding the physical growth of the town creating buildings and
environments to meet the various needs such as social, cultural, economic and
recreational etc. and to provide healthy conditions for both rich and poor to live,
to work, and to play or relax, thus bringing about the social and economic well-
being for the majority of mankind.
Planning is a process of helping a community, identify its problems and its central
values, formulating goals and alternative approaches to achieving community
objectives, and avoiding undesired consequences of change. This process of
planning results in frameworks for coping with change. Some are physical
elements such as streets, roads, and sewer lines. Some are concepts that serve as
guides to action, such as the goal of becoming a major distribution center or of
encouraging investment in the core of the city. Some are regulatory, reflecting the
desires of the community to encourage good development and discourage bad
development.
“A city should be built to give its inhabitants security and happiness” – Aristotle
“A place where men had a common life for a noble end” – Plato
CATEGORIES OF PLANNING
Economic planning
Physical planning
Social planning
predominantly physical in character, such as land use maps, zoning density controls,
building regulations and planning standards.
NEW TOWNS
An appropriate form for the future city has no yet emerged, but serious attention has been
directed to the nature of the modern city in two major areas: the internal urban structure –
redevelopment –and planned decentralization – the New Towns.
welfare was implemented by the dual provision that just compensation is due to private
owners for restrictions by public authorities which impair the value of land, whereas the
enhancement of property values which accrue through public planning decisions may be
assessed by the local authorities. In the administration of this policy it was assumed that
the public funds expended for compensation to property owners would be balanced by
the assessments for betterments, which resulted from land use regulations. Assessments
for betterments for improved values were awkward to determine and almost impossible to
collect. As a consequence, local authorities had inadequate resources upon which to draw
SURVEY METHODS
TYPES OF SURVEYS
Surveys can broadly be divided into two categories depending on the area upon which
they are to be conducted. They are :
REGIONAL SURVEYS
They are those surveys, which are done over a region dealing with
PHYSICAL FACTORS like topography, physically difficult land, geology,
landscape etc.
PHYSICAL ECONOMIC FACTORS like agricultural value of the land, mineral
resources and water gathering lands, areas with public services, transportation
linkages etc.
SOCIAL ECONOMIC FACTORS like areas of influence of towns and villages,
employment, population changes etc.
TOWN SURVEYS
They are done at much small scale and apart from the above data collected from the
regional surveys it also includes
LANDUSE SURVEYS
DENSITY SURVEYS
SURVEYS FOR THE AGE AND CONDITION OF THE BUILDINGS
TRAFFIC SURVEYS
OTHER SOCIAL SURVEYS
For conducting proper survey, primarily relevant enquiries should be framed in the
form of questionnaires for presentation, when required.
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TECHNIQUES OF SURVEYS
Of the various techniques of surveys that are followed, the four listed below are most
prominent
1. self surveys (i.e. mailing questionnaires to the persons to be surveyed )
2. interviews (i.e. by asking questions to the people to be surveyed )
3. direct inspection (i.e. when the surveyor himself inspects the situations concerned
)
4. observers participation (i.e. when the observer himself participate in acquiring the
data required )
NOMINAL where there is no ordering, like asking of sex, age, employment in any
particular service etc.
ORDINAL where there is a specific order of choices like asking of priorities, housing
conditions, climate etc.
INTERVAL where an interval of time is given importance like time taken to shift from
LIG housing to MIG housing, time interval to change from two wheelers to four wheelers
etc. this provides an yardstick of measurements
SELECTION OF SAMPLES
For conducting surveys, it is not always possible to ask each person about his or her
opinion. Hence, certain numbers of persons are selected for conducting the surveys and
these selected persons are known as ‘samples’ of surveying. The selection of the number
of samples is of utmost importance. The basic rules for selection of sample size are as
follows:
1. MORE DISASTROUS THE RESULTS OF POOR INFORMATION, LARGER
SAMPLE SIZE IS REQUIRED. That is if the information got are poor (both
qualitatively and quantitatively) the analysis done from them will be wrong. Thus,
if getting incorrect results have a very disastrous effect on the framing up of the
policies of planning; more number of people is to be surveyed.
2. THE MORE VARIED THE EXPECTED RESPONSES, LARGER SAMPLE
SIZE IS REQUIRED. That is, if it is expected that there will be various kinds of
responses to a particular question, more number of persons are to be asked, as
more varied answers will help in getting different ideas of the people through the
cross section of the people surveyed
The samples could be selected in various ways depending on the type of information
required and the importance of the accuracy of the particular information in the survey
process. The various types of selection of samples are
1. SIMPLE RANDOM SAMPLING ( selecting samples at random without any
criteria to select the samples whatsoever )
2. SYSTEMATIC SAMPLING (selection of the Kth element along a particular
street, where k can be any number )
3. STRATIFIED SAMPLING ( making of a homogenous listing of the different
sects of the population and collecting a certain percentage at random from each
sect)
4. CLUSTERED SAMPLING (when samples are selected from clusters and not
from a homogeneous listing )
A bye-law is a local law framed by a subordinate authority. The building codes or bye-
laws are defined as standards and specifications designed to grant minimum safeguards to
the health and comfort of users and to provide enough safety to the public in general.
The building bye-laws should not be confused with zoning regulations. The former
regulates the construction aspects of buildings. The latter regulates the uses of land and
(or) buildings
Objects of bye-laws
The bye-laws are necessary to achieve the following three objects
It becomes easier to pre-plan the building activities and provisions of bye-laws give
guide lines to the designing architect or engineer
The building bye-laws prevent haphazard development without any resemblance to
the development of the area as a whole
The provisions of building bye-laws usually afford safety to the human beings who
work and live in them against fire, noise, health hazard and structural failure
EGYPTIAN PERIOD
Settlements were located on river banks which were subjected to flood and hence
impact of straight lines and parallel lines were derived by receding lines of flood
water which were parallel and also almost straight as the river Nile
Transportation within the settlement was probably on foot, but inter-settlement
movement was by river
Changing flood level of river needed some protection wall on the river from side
of a settlement
Central spine of transportation was on surface and not water as the river was wide
and settlements grew only on one side of the river
The technology of stone cutting and curving and the tremendous pomp’s and
splendors of the pharaohs led to advanced construction technologies
MOHENJODARA
No fortification
Major streets in the N-S direction
Broadly at right angles
Streets within built-up areas were narrow
Zoning was distinct for distinct groups, commerce at the meeting of east road and
first street, near palace
Three broad divisions of the settlement:
o The religious, institutional and cultural areas - around monastery and great
bath in the western part including temple.
o The northern part - principally for agriculture and industries
o The southern part – principally for administration, trade and commerce
Construction technique was very well advanced:
o Buildings were of masonry construction (sun-dried bricks)
o Ranging from two rooms to mansions with many rooms
o Underground sewerage and drainage from houses
o Pumps (helical) to pump water in great bath
o Principal buildings were monastery and bath – indicating the influence of
religion as a culture (not for defense)
Development of art and craft, science and technology: excellent way of
adjustment to contours
CRETE CIVILIZATION
GOURNIA
Houses upto 3 storeys for palace with living room, bedroom, store, kitchen, toilet,
luxury room
Colonnades timber light wells in the middle windows recessed
Roads were paved with underground drainage, roads were narrow, 10’ to 12’
wide, stepped where needed
Aqueducts for water with coverings, etc
Central building directly adjacent to roads
Houses were enlarging horizontally and vertically
GREEK CIVILIZATION
They had conscious attempt of Town planning: Hippodamus, the town planner
perpendicular roads, individual buildings were made the common denominator and the
functions of the buildings were given importance.
MILETUS
Destroyed in 16th century by Persians who occupied Greece.
Rebuilt in 5 th century
Extensive, regularized form of chess-board planning, an outstanding event in
town building history
Skill and imagination extraordinarily applied in its adaptation to a peninsular site
Two main divisions of the city
SELINUS 700B.C
Fairly high level plateau about 100 ft above sea level
Land surrounded by sea and river on three sides
Central spine road and two cross-roads about 25’ wide
Central area – temple agora location
Due importance given to the roads that connect the detached temple group on the
eastern hill – an unusual feature of selinus
The layout is rectilinear, rather than chess-board, and shows remarkable
adaptation to the circumstances and coherence of arrangement
Its situation, planning and architectural developments were excellent
Courtyard planning for houses, less class distinction, brick and tile roofing and
wooden structure, narrow alleys between roads for drainage, frontage upon 16’
wide roads
The philosophy was of special attention to the public buildings and not houses,
the principle was like precinct planning
Northern extension later for principally commercial activities – a good historical
evidence of an expanding city with expanding commercial activities
ROMAN PERIOD
The forum i.e. the central area, was to be developed at the crossing
of the main roads
The rest of the town was to be divided into squares or rectangular
plots of one side equaling 120’
o Defense requirements which include, in addition to the defense wall
The town must be quick and simple to lay out i.e. to avoid all
curvature in streets
The town must be easy to police and defend i.e. long distance
visibility for easy policing needed roads to be absolutely straight
The roads must be at least 8 ft. wide
All construction within the town was to be of concrete (lime) and stone, and in specific
cases they might be faced by bricks
Regional considerations:
Town, which is congested, should be freed of surplus population, which should
then be housed in a new place. The towns should be so situated as they would be
in a position to help each other.
There should be a ‘sangrahan’ among ten villages, a ‘sarvatik’ among two
hundred, a ‘dronamukh’ among four hundred and a ‘sthaniya’ among eight
hundred villages.
People who come to stay at the time of a new settlement or those who come to
reside later in this new settlement should be exempted from payment of taxes for
some years. In the new village, there should be higher proportion of agriculturists
and shudras. There should be a market provided for the sale of goods received
from traders on highways.
Dams should be constructed over river nalas. Temples and gardens should be
provided. Arrangements should be made for looking after the aged, the children
and informal persons. Cereals and wealth will grow if the agriculturists are kept
busy. Attempts should be made to protect and increase quarries, forests and
canals.
Town planning:
A city should be located in the central part of a country to facilitate trade and
commerce.
The site selected for the purpose of this city should be quite large in area, and on
the banks of a river, or by the side of an artificial or natural lake, which never
goes dry.
Its shape should be circular, rectangular or square as would suit the topography.
There should be water on all sides.
Separate areas should be provided for marketing different goods.
There should be a wall around the town, which should be six dandas high and
twelve dandas wide.
Beyond this wall there should be three moats of 14 feet, 12 feet and 10 feet wide
to be constructed four arm-lengths apart. The depth should be three-fourth of
width.
Three east - west and three North – south roads, should divide the town. The main
roads should be eight dandas wide and other roads four dandas wide.
The palace should be in the central part. It should face either north or east.
The houses of priests and ministers should be on the south-east, traders, skilled
workers, and kshatriyas on the east, the treasury, goldsmiths and industries on the
south, forest produce on the northeast and doctors city fathers, army commander,
artists, on the south.
Temples should be located in the center of the town.
Cemeteries should be located on the north and east of the town, that for the higher
caste to be located on the south.
The depressed classes should be housed beyond cemetery. There should be one
well for every group of ten houses.
Housing
Foundation of houses should be two arm lengths deep. Every house should be
provided with a latrine and a well
For festivals, special bathrooms and toilet rooms should be constructed.
The water should be drained by means of a Nala having sufficient slope.
The open space between two houses and two balconies should be four feet lengths
wide.
The front door should be four-foot lengths wide. There should be no obstruction
to the door shutter opening inside.
To ensure lighting of the room a small window should be provided high up in the
wall. Roof should stand rains.
Those who obstruct steps, Nahanis, or cause any damage to the walls of building
due to sullage water or dirty water, they will be severely punished.
A drain must be provided for carrying away wastewater, it should have an
adequate velocity.
Those who throw waste on the streets will be severely punished.
The bathrooms, latrines, grinding place and open spaces, excluding special halls
and rooms must be made available for the common use of all tenants, in the
house.
Those who will leave the house for their own accord must pay a year’s rent to the
landlord.
A census should be taken of all men and women wherein information should be
noted down about the caste, Gotra, occupation, income and expenditure. For
summer season, arrangements should be kept ready for attending to extinguishing
of fires.
SAMRAT ASHOK
The Mauryan Empire attained its maximum glory in the time of Samrat Ashok. The
empire covered the whole of India (except Assam and some southern part) Afghanistan,
Baluchistan, Kashmir and Nepal. He became the champion of Buddhism and engraved
principles of this religion on pillars rocks and caves in the various parts reference has
already made in the last chapter to the numerous viharas built by him especially in
Magadha, now known as Bihar on this account. He also dug wells; planted trees built rest
houses and hospitals. The Ashok pillar at Sarnath, bearing a Lion and a wheel has been
incorporated in the National Flag of free India to signify unit of India prevailing in Ashok
period. The Mauryan Empire was divided into provinces, cities and Municipalities.
Village administration was in the hands of ‘Gramics’. For ten villages there was a ‘Gopa’
and above him a ‘sthanika’. Taxes collected from citizens were spent on public welfare
works such as tree plantation, digging of lakes, and constructing rest houses and hospitals
KING VIKRAMADITYA
King Vikramaditya was a great patron of learning and nine great scholars called
‘Navratnas (nine jewels) adorned his court. The celebrated kalidas, poet and dramatist
was one of them classical Sanskrit reached wonderful heights of its glory. Cities like
Ujjain, pataliputra (patna), Mathura and sharavati become great centers of learning and
culture. Fa Hein, a Chinese traveler who visited India during the fourth century A.D.
writes that ‘the government was liberal. People had enough food clothes and housing.
They lived an easy and a comfortable life. Wealth was multiplied by industry and trade.
Art and architecture entered a classical stage. Caves at Ajantha and Yellora with their
world famous paintings belong to this period. The famous Iron pillar at Delhi near Qutb
Minar was cast by Kumar gupta in the fifth century A.D.
MANASARA VASTUSHASTRA
Another elaborate treatise on town planning in ancient India. It is perhaps of a later date –
about 6th century A.D. There are several chapters in this book on town planning and
construction of buildings. One interesting feature however deserves special mention.
There are eight different types of towns and villages according to the shapes:
Dandaka
Sarvathobhadra
Nandyavarta
Padmaka
Swastika
Prastara
Karmuka
Chaturmukha
Dandaka
Dandaka type of town plan provides for two main entrance gates and is generally
adopted for the formation of small towns and villages, the village offices being
located in the east.
The female deity of the village or the chamadevata will generally be located
outside the village and the male deities in the northern portion.
Sarvathobhadra
This type of town plan is applicable to larger villages and towns, which have to be
constructed on a square sites.
According to this plan, the whole town should be fully occupied by houses of
various descriptions and inhabited by all classes of people.
The temple dominates the village.
Nandyavarta
This plan is commonly used for the construction of towns and not for villages.
It is generally adopted for the sites either circular or square, with not less than
three thousand houses, but not more than four thousand.
The streets run parallel to the central adjoining streets with the temple of the
presiding deity in the center of the town.
“Nandyavarta” is the name of a flower, the form of which is followed in this
layout.
Padmaka
This type of plan was practiced for building of the towns with fortress all round.
The pattern of the plan resembles the petals of lotus radiating outwards from the
center.
The city used to be practically an island surrounded by water, having no scope for
expansion
Swastika
Swastika type of plan contemplates some diagonal streets dividing the site into
certain triangular plots.
The site need not be marked out into a square or rectangle and it may be of any
shape.
A rampart wall surrounds the town, with a moat at its foot filled with water.
Two main streets cross each other at the center, running south to north and west to
east.
Prastara
The characteristic feature of this plan is that the site may be either square or
rectangular but not triangular or circular.
The sites are set apart for the poor, the middle class, the rich and the very rich, the
sizes of the sites increasing according to the capacity of each to purchase or build
upon.
The main roads are much wider compared to those of other patterns.
The town may or may not be surrounded by a fort.
Karmuka
This plan is suitable for the place where the site of the town is in the form of a
bow or semi-circular or parabolic and mostly applied for towns located on the
seashore or riverbanks.
The main streets of the town run from north to south or east to west and the cross
streets run at right-angles to them, dividing the whole area into blocks.
The presiding deity, commonly a female deity, is installed in the temple build in
any convenient place.
Chaturmukha
Chaturmukha type of plan is applicable to all towns starting from the largest town
to the smallest village.
The site may be either square or rectangular having four faces.
The town is laid out east to west lengthwise, with four main streets.
The temple of the presiding deity will be always at the center.
MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Towns were walled and fortified – like an island in a hostile world
Founded on irregular terrains, occupying hill tops or islands
Built by merchant, craftsmen and shopkeepers against deudalism. Hence, local
loyalties grew up
Irregular road pattern inside the fortification wall to confuse the invaders; but
roads were paved
The most commanding position was occupied by the church
The city council of the merchants and craftsmen and the role in administration
and civic and cultural life developed local patriotism
Merchants love in gain or profit manifestation expanding benefit of fellow
citizens, - building churches, founding hospitals buying off market tolls
A new dimension of civic spaces emerged
The most common meeting place was in the market square.
Civic buildings were around it
Open spaces, the piazza, the plaza, the place, were very common
Characteristics of Medieval open spaces:
o Demarcated by a continuous row of public buildings
o Monuments, statuary, etc. will stand off the main streets
o Sides are, or appear to be, closed
o Visual expression of formality
o Proportion was to enhance principal buildings; width was not less than
twice the height
Houses were simple, living and sleeping spaces were in the upp0er floor, the
ground floor used for storage, workshops and kitchen
Waste disposal within houses rarely provided (only some had privies)
Thatch – covered roof, sometimes fire-proof roofs
Streets were usually paved and maintained by the owner of the property facing
upon them
established in the fourteenth century, it played an important role in the social and cultural
history of south India, for about three centuries out of which the earlier two hundred
years were years of glory. The ruler of vijayanagar was Krishna Dev Raya (1599 – 1529).
People loved and respected him. Foreigners admired him. During his time, vijayanagar
kingdom reached climax of its power and glory. Vijaynagar Town was beautiful with
temples, palaces, and gardens. Sculpture and painting rose of great heights as could be
seen from ruins of Hampi. The population of the Town was more than five lakhs. The
Bazaars were rich and full of all commodities; many articles of jewellery and precious
stones were sold. Encouragement was given to Sanskrit literature. Sayanacharya wrote
commentaries on Rigveda.
MUGHAL PERIOD
In contrast to the builders of cities like Mohenjo-daro and Harappa or the Hindu sthapatis
who right down to modern times designed villages upon a magic grid diagram, Islamic
architects frequently left the layout of streets to chance or allowed this to develop
organically as the settlement grew in size.
It was not until the sixteenth century that one Islamic ruler in India, the great Mughal
Akbar, took on the task of planning an entire residential town, comprising palaces,
Mosques, or travelers bungalow etc. His old residence of Agra could not be expanded any
further owing to the unfavourable terrain and dusty jumble of houses. Hence, he decided
to move his residence from Agra to an n auspicious mountain, Sikri where a hermit
FATEHPUR SIKRI
Fatehpur sikri had a rectangular town hall with it longer side running parallel to
the line of the ridge.
Along its axis i.e., from northeast to southwest ran the principle thoroughfare,
which led to the highest part of the ridge where the palace stood.
A wall only on three sides to the northeast in enclosed the town fronted on a lake,
formed artificially in some low-lying ground by damming a river.
Today the lake had dried up and the houses of the townsfolk on either side of the
ridge have disappeared.
For shortage of water compelled the emperor and his suite to leave these buildings
after they had been occupied for less than two decades.
The plan shows that all the buildings do not fit in with the general orientation of
the town.
The caravan serais, mint, treasury and baths, located on the hillside follow the
natural contours i.e., the axis of the town.
The mosque had to be oriented towards Mecca.
Since the plateau extends from the southwest to the northeast and the ideal
orientation ran from north to south, the different courts had to be staggered one
behind the other.
Hence in Mughal period cities like Agra, Delhi was re-developed. Fatehpur sikri was
entirely planned. Fortification was strengthened in Bijapur, Lucknow. They built
many forts in places like Agra, Delhi and developed beautiful ornamental gardens
popularly known as ‘Mughal Gardens’ some of them are still in good conditions, for
e.g. Kabul Bagh at panipat by Babur, Shalimar Bagh and Nishat Bagh by shah Jahan,
Lal Bagh by Haider Ali. In the same period, other rulers also built beautiful cities like
Jaipur and Vijayanagar with new concepts of town planning.
JAIPUR CITY
The city of jaipur can be described perhaps the only solitary example of a planned
city. It was originally conceived and laid out by the Rajput king Maharajah
Jaisingh in the eighteenth century. The city was built in 1753 within six years of
the laying of its foundation stone on a carefully prepared plan, with broad avenues
and public buildings.
But it is to sawai Ramsingh that the credit of making jaipur a world-famous city;
he gave the city its universal pink colour; he founded all the Institutions by which
Jaipur came to be ranked amongst the most progressive princely stats in India.
Jaipur had originally well laid out roads with ‘Geometric precision and
Arithmetical accuracy’, with symmetrical open squares and fountains lined with
uniform buildings
FACTORY TOWN
In 1816, Robert Owen, an industrialist in England proposed a plan of a community
that could be
Self-supporting and reduce the cost of relief which was very heavy and with
Large central open space for community buildings
Surrounding the dwellings were large gardens
Surrounding the center were dwellings
Main roads encircle the entire compound
The factories and workshops were outside the community across the main roads
The entire compound surrounded by agricultural area of 1000 to 1500 acres
Total community areas was to be of 50 to 100 acres
Total population = 1200 or so
It was a plan for a co-operative community combining industry and agriculture
GARDEN CITY
A town designed for healthy living and industry.
Town of a size that makes possible a full measure of social life, but not larger
Land will remain in a single ownership of the community or held in trust for the
community.
Not a colony, but a complete working city of population about 30,000
A large central park containing public buildings
Central park surrounded by a shopping street
Central park and shopping street are surrounded by dwellings in all directions – at
density of 12 families / acre
The outer circle of factories and industries
The whole is surrounded by a permanent green belt of 5000 acres
The town area is of about 1000 acres
In 1899, the garden city association was formed.
In 1903 – Letch worth started, 35 miles from London, town area: about 500 acres,
designed for 35,000 persons, 3,000 acres of green belt. By 1947 it had about
16,000 populations and about 100 factories.
In 1920 – Welwyn started 2400 acres, 40000 persons design capacity. By 1947, it had
about 18,000 population and 70 factories.
By keeping the land in single ownership, the possibility of speculation and
overcrowding would be eliminated and the increment of value created by the
community in the industrial and commercial (shops) sets would be preserved for
it-self.
PATRICK GEDDES
A Scot who has been called the father of modern town planning, Geddes did
much of his pioneering work in the Old Town of Edinburgh, having made his
married home there in 1886.
Geddes’ name and spirit are imperishably associated with Ramsay Garden and the
Outlook Tower, both in Castle hill.
Geddes was concerned with the relationship between people and cities and how
they affect one another. He emphasized that people do not merely needed shelter, but
also food and work, the recreation and social life. This makes the house an
inseparable part of the neighbourhood, the city and the surrounding open country and
the region.
The town planning primarily meant establishing organic relationship among ‘Folk,
place and work’, which corresponds to triad (Geddesian triad) of organism,
function and environment.
FOLK WORK PLACE
I.e. organism i.e. function i.e. environment
(Social aspect) (Economical aspect) (Physical aspect)
“Cities in Evolution’ – published in 1915 – essence of the book – city beautiful
movement and too many small schemes here and there like garden cities were
only poor examples of town planning.
In this book he coined the term “Conurbation” to describe the waves of population
inflow to large cities, followed by overcrowding and slum formation, and then the
wave of backflow – the whole process resulting in amorphous sprawl, waste, and
unnecessary obsolescence.
True rural development, true urban planning, true city design have little in common
and repeating the same over all the three was disastrous and economically
wasteful
Each valid scheme should and must embody the full utilization of its local and
regional conditions
Geddes was the originator of the idea and technique of Regional survey and city
survey
The sequence of planning is to be:
v. Regional survey
vi. Rural development
vii. Town planning
viii. City design
The tower was conceived as a tool for regional analysis, index-museum and the
‘world’s first sociological laboratory’. It represents the essence of Geddes’s thought -
his holism, visual thinking, and commitment to understanding the city in the region.
PATRICK GEDDES IN INDIA
He came to India in 1915 at the invitation of Lord Pent land, the then Governor of
Madras. He gave his expert advice for the improvement of about eighteen major towns in
India.
He laid emphasis on “Survey before plan” i.e. diagnosis before treatment to make a
correct diagnosis of various ills from which the town suffers and then prescribe the
correct remedies for its cure. These are the physical and social economic surveys.
He was the first man who introduced the sociological concept in the town planning.
Before coming to India, he had successfully overcome the horrors of Edinborough slums.
LEWIS MUMFORD
CLARENCE A. PERRY
He laid down the fundamental elements on which he intended the neighbourhood unit
should be based size, boundaries open spaces, institutional sites, local shops and internal
road system. Its six basic principles were:
7. The size should be related to the catchment area of an elementary school.
8. The residential area should be bounded on all sides by arterial streets; there should be
no through traffic.
9. There should be ample provision of small parks and play areas.
10. There should be a central point to the neighbourhood containing the school and other
services.
11. District shops should be located on the periphery, thus serving approximately four
neighbourhoods.
12. There should be a hierarchy of streets facilitating access but discouraging through
traffic.
DOXIADIS, CONSTANTINOS A
Doxiadis most important contribution to architectural and planning thought was the
development of ekistics.
The attempt to arrive at a proper conception and implementation of the facts, concepts
and ideas related to human settlements, and the attempt to re-examine all principles and
theories and to readjust the disciplines and professions connected with settlements, led to
the need for a special discipline of human settlements, the discipline of Ekistics.
Since one of the major problem faced was the merging of settlements into much larger
and complicated organisms, Doxiadis at the Athens center of Ekistics was working on an
attempt to foresee where human settlements are going in the future. It seems that they
will merge into ever-larger groupings, which will become a continuous universal
settlement, the universal city or Ecumenopolis.
Doxiadis said “When we try to classify the settlements according to their dimensions, we
will soon realise that they do not belong to easily definable categories of sizes but spread
over the whole spectrum of possible sizes. Any such division will, therefore, have to be
somewhat arbitrary, but it must also be an inherently satisfying and reasonable one.
Such a division has been worked out based on empirical experience and is presented in a
logarithmic scale.
The smallest unit of measurement is Man. He does not form a settlement in himself since
he is one of its elements, but he does have a shell (his clothing is the smallest possible
human shell and personal furniture plays the same role) and he is the Basic and
indispensable unit of measurement. The second smallest unit is a normal room. From this
we go to a dwelling, a group of several dwellings, a small neighbourhood, a
neighbourhood, a small town, a town, a city, a metropolis, a conurbation, a megalopolis,
an urban region, an urbanized continent, until, finally, we reach the largest conceivable
space for a settlement, which is the whole Earth.
This Ekistics Logarithmic Scale (ELS) can be presented graphically in several ways. One
way is based on the areas covered by the different units(area ELS), another way is based
on the number of people corresponding to each unit (population ELS).
The ELS consist of 15 Ekistics units ranging from Man to Ecumenopolis and these units
in turn belong to four basic groups
Minor shells, or elementary units (man, room, house)
Micro-settlements, the units smaller than, or as small as, the traditional town where
people used to and still do achieve interconnection by walking
Meso-settlements, between the traditional town and the conurbation within which one
can commute daily
Macro-settlements, whose largest possible expression is the Ecumenopolis.
LE CORBUSIER
In the early twenties, Le Corbusier realized that many cities around the world were on
the brink of an urban implosion due to poor design, inadequate housing and
inefficient transportation. He studied these problems and advised bold new
solutions.
His theories helped shape the planning of many cities of the world, and the influence
they exerted on a new generation of architects and planners is legendary.
He conceived plans for Algiers, Nemours, the university city of Brazil, Buenos
Aires (Argentina), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Barcelona (Spain), Geneva(
Switzerland), Stockholm (Sweden) and Antwerp (Belgium)
His plans for cities were the result of a detailed analysis of three major urban factors –
roads, housing and open spaces.
He felt that roads should be arranged on the ‘grid – iron’ pattern with minimum
crossings. Consequently, segregation of different forms of traffic was inevitable.
He recommended skyscrapers for commercial and residential purposes, surrounded
by large open spaces or parks.
He claimed that on an average nearly 90 percent of the ground area of his modern city
would consist of open spaces encompassing residential areas. He called his city
‘One Great Park’ with a lot of greenery around the buildings.
‘The city of Tomorrow’ for 30,00,000 people was proposed by Le Corbusier in 1922,
which was based on four principles :
This scheme was a city of magnificent skyscraper towers surrounded by broad and
sweeping open space.
The city was a huge park. Sixty-story office buildings accommodating 1,200 people
per acre and covering only 5% of the ground area were grouped in the heart of the
city
The hub of the plan is the transportation centre for motor, and rail lines, the roof of
which is the air – field. Main highways are elevated.
Surrounding the skyscrapers was the apartment district, eight-story buildings arranged
in zigzag rows with broad open spaces about them, the density of population
being 120 persons per acre.
Lying about the outskirts were the garden cities of single-family houses.
The residential zone contains schools, shopping centers, and recreational facilities.
sir Edwin Lutyens, assisted by Baker. The capital group of building like Government
House, council hall, and secretariat were designed. Industrial buildings were separated
from residential sector and arranged around the commercial and civic buildings. It was
more a planning and designing of Administrative center than a new town as such, and
was mostly copied from their experience back home.
In India, the socialist orientation of the government made it strongly receptive to the
concept of large-scale planning and its first five-year plan called for a national town and
country-planning act. Individual states were empowered to planning legislation as well as
machinery for its implementation. Administrative progress was slow because of lack of
Indian town planners. To remedy this, the government encouraged the establishment of
academic programs in this field and thus in 1949 a department of Architecture and
country planning was created by the Bengal Engineering College. The Department of
architecture and Regional planning begun in 1955 by IIT kharagpur. The school of Town
and country planning was established by the government in New Delhi and was
subsequently attached to the University of Delhi as school of planning and Architecture.
In the years following independence, India’s major cities were subjected to numerous
studies, surveys, projection recommendations, and long-range plans. Planning
documents, frequently prepared with the help of foreign consultants, reflected attempts to
summarize information, analyses problems and suggest directions for future urban
development. A series of tentative planning efforts culminated in the establishment of
Development Authorities in metropolitan cities of Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras.
Dominant in western planning at this time was the concept of decentralization through
regional development. It was hoped that through systems such a planned satellite towns,
excessive congestion could be avoided and balanced patterns of residence and
employment established. A particular focus of attention among planners in the 1950 was
the New towns program in Britain, where the growth of London was guided by means of
a green belt surrounded by a series of new urban centers.
Many industrial towns were planned after Post – Independence period. A few of these are
4. STEEL TOWNS
Durgapur West Bengal
Bhilai Madya pradesh
Rourkela Orissa
Salem Tamil Nadu
5. INDUSTRIAL TOWNS
Jamshedpur Bihar
Bhadravati Karnataka
Gandhinagar Gujarat
6. CAPITAL CITIES
Chandigarh Union territory
Gandhinagar Gujarat
An art of shaping and guiding the physical growth of the town creating buildings and
environments to meet the various needs such as social, cultural, economic and
recreational etc. and to provide healthy conditions for both rich and poor to live,
to work, and to play or relax, thus bringing about the social and economic well-
being for the majority of mankind.
Planning is a process of helping a community, identify its problems and its central
values, formulating goals and alternative approaches to achieving community
objectives, and avoiding undesired consequences of change. This process of
planning results in frameworks for coping with change. Some are physical
elements such as streets, roads, and sewer lines. Some are concepts that serve as
guides to action, such as the goal of becoming a major distribution center or of
encouraging investment in the core of the city. Some are regulatory, reflecting the
desires of the community to encourage good development and discourage bad
development.
“A city should be built to give its inhabitants security and happiness” – Aristotle
“A place where men had a common life for a noble end” – Plato
CATEGORIES OF PLANNING
Economic planning
Physical planning
Social planning
predominantly physical in character, such as land use maps, zoning density controls,
building regulations and planning standards.
NEW TOWNS
An appropriate form for the future city has no yet emerged, but serious attention has been
directed to the nature of the modern city in two major areas: the internal urban structure –
redevelopment –and planned decentralization – the New Towns.
welfare was implemented by the dual provision that just compensation is due to private
owners for restrictions by public authorities which impair the value of land, whereas the
enhancement of property values which accrue through public planning decisions may be
assessed by the local authorities. In the administration of this policy it was assumed that
the public funds expended for compensation to property owners would be balanced by
the assessments for betterments, which resulted from land use regulations. Assessments
for betterments for improved values were awkward to determine and almost impossible to
collect. As a consequence, local authorities had inadequate resources upon which to draw
SURVEY METHODS
TYPES OF SURVEYS
Surveys can broadly be divided into two categories depending on the area upon which
they are to be conducted. They are :
REGIONAL SURVEYS
They are those surveys, which are done over a region dealing with
PHYSICAL FACTORS like topography, physically difficult land, geology,
landscape etc.
PHYSICAL ECONOMIC FACTORS like agricultural value of the land, mineral
resources and water gathering lands, areas with public services, transportation
linkages etc.
SOCIAL ECONOMIC FACTORS like areas of influence of towns and villages,
employment, population changes etc.
TOWN SURVEYS
They are done at much small scale and apart from the above data collected from the
regional surveys it also includes
LANDUSE SURVEYS
DENSITY SURVEYS
SURVEYS FOR THE AGE AND CONDITION OF THE BUILDINGS
TRAFFIC SURVEYS
OTHER SOCIAL SURVEYS
For conducting proper survey, primarily relevant enquiries should be framed in the
form of questionnaires for presentation, when required.
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TECHNIQUES OF SURVEYS
Of the various techniques of surveys that are followed, the four listed below are most
prominent
5. self surveys (i.e. mailing questionnaires to the persons to be surveyed )
6. interviews (i.e. by asking questions to the people to be surveyed )
7. direct inspection (i.e. when the surveyor himself inspects the situations concerned
)
8. observers participation (i.e. when the observer himself participate in acquiring the
data required )
NOMINAL where there is no ordering, like asking of sex, age, employment in any
particular service etc.
ORDINAL where there is a specific order of choices like asking of priorities, housing
conditions, climate etc.
INTERVAL where an interval of time is given importance like time taken to shift from
LIG housing to MIG housing, time interval to change from two wheelers to four wheelers
etc. this provides an yardstick of measurements
SELECTION OF SAMPLES
For conducting surveys, it is not always possible to ask each person about his or her
opinion. Hence, certain numbers of persons are selected for conducting the surveys and
these selected persons are known as ‘samples’ of surveying. The selection of the number
of samples is of utmost importance. The basic rules for selection of sample size are as
follows:
4. MORE DISASTROUS THE RESULTS OF POOR INFORMATION, LARGER
SAMPLE SIZE IS REQUIRED. That is if the information got are poor (both
qualitatively and quantitatively) the analysis done from them will be wrong. Thus,
if getting incorrect results have a very disastrous effect on the framing up of the
policies of planning; more number of people is to be surveyed.
5. THE MORE VARIED THE EXPECTED RESPONSES, LARGER SAMPLE
SIZE IS REQUIRED. That is, if it is expected that there will be various kinds of
responses to a particular question, more number of persons are to be asked, as
more varied answers will help in getting different ideas of the people through the
cross section of the people surveyed
The samples could be selected in various ways depending on the type of information
required and the importance of the accuracy of the particular information in the survey
process. The various types of selection of samples are
5. SIMPLE RANDOM SAMPLING ( selecting samples at random without any
criteria to select the samples whatsoever )
6. SYSTEMATIC SAMPLING (selection of the Kth element along a particular
street, where k can be any number )
7. STRATIFIED SAMPLING ( making of a homogenous listing of the different
sects of the population and collecting a certain percentage at random from each
sect)
8. CLUSTERED SAMPLING (when samples are selected from clusters and not
from a homogeneous listing )
A bye-law is a local law framed by a subordinate authority. The building codes or bye-
laws are defined as standards and specifications designed to grant minimum safeguards to
the health and comfort of users and to provide enough safety to the public in general.
The building bye-laws should not be confused with zoning regulations. The former
regulates the construction aspects of buildings. The latter regulates the uses of land and
(or) buildings
Objects of bye-laws
The bye-laws are necessary to achieve the following three objects
It becomes easier to pre-plan the building activities and provisions of bye-laws give
guide lines to the designing architect or engineer
The building bye-laws prevent haphazard development without any resemblance to
the development of the area as a whole
The provisions of building bye-laws usually afford safety to the human beings who
work and live in them against fire, noise, health hazard and structural failure
Administrative procedures
Whenever any government department or a public authority want to acquire any land,
they must send their requisition proposal to the appropriate office of the government,
(normally designated as land acquisition collector – who is in every district and big cities)
who will on behalf of the department or public authority, which needs the land, go
through the various stages of the land acquisition procedure until he takes possession of
the land and hands it over to the concerned department or the public authority.
Important stages in land acquisition procedure while acquiring land for public purpose
Publication of preliminary notification by the Government that a particular
land is needed or likely to be needed for a public purpose
Hearing of objections to the above mentioned notification from interested
parties by the collector and his report to the Government in this matter
Declaration by the Government that the land is required for a public purpose
Notification by collector declaring Government’s intention to acquire land and
calling for claims for compensation from interested parties
Enquiry into the compensation claims and passing of award by the collector
Taking possession of the land by the collector after payment of compensation
and handing it over to the authority requiring the same
REGIONAL PLANNING
Regional planning deals primarily with the integrated development of human settlements
and countryside within a region. It aims at reducing the disparity in the level of living of
the people and the wide gulf between urban and rural life. Regional planning can be a
tool for balanced development of the nation and co-ordinate the aims and objectives of
the national development planning with the implementation programmes at the micro-
level.
REGION
The term ‘Region’ applies to an area with certain characteristics, often-mere size, by
virtue of which it is adopted as a suitable unit for some particular purpose of business and
administration. It is also an area which is homogeneous in respect of some particular set
of associated conditions, whether of the land or of the people, such as industry, farming,
distribution of population, commerce, or the general sphere of influence of a city. A
region in general terms is envisaged as a natural unit, in contrast to the artificial unit
created for administrative purposes.
For planning purposes, whether for planning a town or a country, new unit areas are
required, differing in character and extent for particular purposes. Though different areas
are used for distinct purposes – say, for planning towns, developing resources, collecting
census data, regionalisation of public services, like health and housing and so on – it is
essential that there should be as close a geographical co-ordination between them as is
practicable.
FINANCE
Amortisation
Ammortisation is a means of paying out a predetermined sum (the principal) plus interest
over a fixed period of time, so that the principal is completely eliminated by the end of
the term.
Various forms of non property taxes that can be imposed by a municipality for
mobilization of development funds
Betterment tax
Professional tax
Tax on real estate
Water tax
Sewerage tax etc.
Factors that are to be considered for “life cycle cost analysis” while evaluating alternative
materials in any urban construction project
Cost of the material
TWELFTH SCHEDULE
Management of resources – economic, social political and human – for optimum results
The procedures and practices that would be necessary for communication and
coordination
PLANNING LEGISLATION
Legislation forms a very important tool in the hands of town planners as the laws help the
planners to develop the cities, as they want. Without the laws it becomes impossible to
implement the new concepts of planning and to restrict the developments, which are not
conducive for the general welfare of the city dwellers. The two most important laws that
help the planners to implement their plans are:
Eminent domain – by which the government can acquire any private property for
the sake of public welfare, public health and public safety
Police power – by which the developmental authorities can control the nuisances
and the undue developments. Most of the developmental controls like building
bye-laws and planning laws emanate from this police power
Nuisance is of two types
Private nuisance, which affect the enjoyment of the individual, and
Public nuisance, which affect the health, safety, moral values and comfort of the
public at large. These nuisances come in the form of noise, air pollution, water
pollution etc.
The police power takes care of these nuisances and also it empowers the authorities to
look after the issues like architectural conservation, esthetics, spiritual values etc.
The municipal authorities that work with mainly two instruments like generally exercise
the police power:
1. Building bye-laws, which establish municipal safeguards of the constructions and
use of buildings
2. Development controls, which shape the overall urban network.
CAPACITY BUILDING
Capacity building in urban development means working to get to a situation where cities
are planned and managed more effectively that at present. It is a concept that goes beyond
training of individuals to the institutions and frameworks that they work within. This has
considerable impact on the approach of capacity building institutions and of their partners
if cities are to play their potential role in human and economic development.
Training has much more importance to equip the professionals for capacity building and
to respond effectively to their changing roles. With greater political control over planning
and urban development, the training programmes have to give more emphasis on
preparing the urban managers and professionals to be more organized, productive,
responsive to public and also to act with integrity within the political system. In this
regard, attitudinal changes for new management culture, facilitating public participation,
decentralization, sharing of information, and personal action planning are the critical
priorities of capacity building.
Planning theory
PLANNING PROCESS:
All stages of actions from defining the objectives till implementation and review of any
planning project in the planning process. In plan preparation, the physical planning
should associate with the socio-economical, geographical, political factors, for achieving
the objective in desired direction.
The various stages of planning process is as follows:
10. Identification and definition of problems
11. Defining the objectives
The purpose of community planning is to anticipate the physical environment that will
best serve the needs of the people living and working in an urban area, and then to make
comprehensive programme to guide urban growth and renewal. There are six minimum
SETTLEMENT PATTERN
Census of India defines an Urban Area as
(i) all places with a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area
committee;
(ii) all other places which has features as
(1) a minimum population of 5000;
(2) at least 75% of the male working population engaged in non- agricultural
pursuits and
(3) a density of population of at least 400 persons per sq. km.
Apart from urban area & urban agglomeration rest is considered as Rural Area.
Decentralized shopping centers and offices may further distort the pattern, and the CBD
might experience a decrease in rents and density following the reduction in its
accessibility through congestion
The concentric zone models also ignores physical features, take little account of
industrial and railway use and disregards the effect of radial route ways upon land values
and uses
A city had grown geometrically at a rate of 7% per annum from 1991 to 2001. In the year
2001, the city had a population of 701276. The net migration rate for the city during the
above period had been 10 per thousand population. What was the net migration to the city
during 1991 to 2001
701276 = Po (1 + 7/100) 10
Po ( population in the year 1991 ) = 356493
Increase in population = Pt – Po = 701276 – 356493 = 344783
Net migration rate is 10 per 1000 i.e. 1%
Net migration to the city during 1991 to 2001 = 1% of increase in population from 1991
to 2001
= 1% of 344783
= 3447.83 ~ 3444 persons
Municipal supplies may be drawn from a single source or from a number of different
ones. The water from multiple sources is ordinarily mixed before distribution.
PURIFICATION OF WATER
Some of the water collected from surface or ground source are satisfactory in quality for
all common municipal uses. Such water needs to be protected only by disinfections.
Others containing objectionable substances in varying quantities, and these substances
must be removed, reduced to tolerable limit, destroyed, or otherwise changed in character
before they are sent to the consumer. Impurities are acquired in normal passage of water
through the atmosphere, over the earth’s surface, or through the pores of the ground.
They are associated in their pollution aspects with man’s activities and, in particular, with
his own use of water in household and industry and his discharge of spent watercourses.
Purification works in public water supply system is employed to make water;
1. Hygienically safe,
2. Esthetically attractive and palatable, and
The most common classes of municipal water purification works and their principal
functions are:
1. Filtration plants that remove objectionable colour, turbidity and bacteria as well ad
other potentially harmful organisms by filtration through sand after necessary
preparation of the water by coagulation and sedimentation.
2. Defferrization and demagnetization plants that remove excessive amounts of iron and
manganese by oxidizing the soluble ferrous and manganeous compounds, which are
removable by sedimentation and filtration.
3. Softening plants that remove excessive amounts of scale-forming soap consuming
compounds, chiefly and soluble bicarbonate, chloride and sulphate of calcium and
magnesium.
Most water supplies are chlorinated to assure their disinfections and many waters are
treated with lime or other chemicals to reduce their tendency to corrode iron and other
metals with which they come into contact.
TRANSPORTATION OF WATER:
Supply conduits or aqueducts, transport water from the source of supply to the
community and so form the connecting link between the collection works and the
distribution system. The location of the source determines whether the conduits are short
or long and whether the water is transported by gravity by pumping. Depending upon
topography and available materials, conduits are designed to carry the water in open
channel flow under pressure. They may follow the hydraulic grade line as:
1. canals dug through the ground,
2. flumes elevated above the ground,
3. grade aqueducts laid in balanced cut and cover at ground surface,
4. grade tunnels penetrating hills, or they may depend from the hydraulic gradient as
pressure aqueducts laid in balanced out and cover at the ground surface
5. pressure tunnels dipping beneath valleys or hills
6. pipe lines of fabricated materials following the ground surface.
Size and shape of supply conduits are determined by hydraulic, structural and economic
considerations. Velocities of flow are held ordinarily between 1 to 1.5 m/sec. Requisite
capacity depends upon the inclusion and size of service, or distributing reservoirs, in the
supply system.
The service reservoirs are designed to store enough water. Its capacity will be a day’s
consumption of water plus 50% excess of the average daily rate of use. Ordinarily,
required storage is approximately a day’s consumption.
DISTRIBUTION OF WATER:
The system of conduits that conveys water to the points use from the terminus of the
supply conduit, is known as the distribution system. Street plan, topography, location of
supply work and distribution storage, etc., establish the type of distribution system and
the character of flow through it. Depending upon the street plan, two distribution patterns
predominate:
1. A branching pattern on the outskirts of the community in which ribbon development
follows the primary arteries of road and streets and
2. To gridiron pattern within the built up portion of the community in which streets criss
cross, pipes are interconnected. Hydraulically the gridiron system possesses the
advantage of carrying water to any spot from more than one direction. The branching
system has the disadvantage of dead ends. The carrying capacity of the grid iron
system is strengthened by providing, in place of a central feeder, a loop or belt of
feeder pipes the supplies water to the congested, or high value, district from at least
two direction, thereby more or less doubling the delivery of grid. In large system,
feeder conduits take the form of pressure tunnels, pressure aqueducts, or steel pipes.
In smaller communities, the entire distribution system is generally made up of cast-
iron pipes. Cast iron is the most common material for service mains. Steel and
asbestos-cement pipes are also widely employed.
The nature of industrial waste depends upon the industrial processes. Some industrial
wastes are so objectionable that they should not be admitted to the public sewerage
system. Some industrial wastes adhere to sewers and clog them. Some others contain
acids and hydrogen sulphide, which destroy cement concrete etc. used in construction of
sewers
In combined system, waste matters from household, industries and storm water run off
are collected in a single pipe
But in separate system, domestic and industrial sewage and storm water are collected in
separate sewers
MANHOLE
Some deposition of solids is bound to occur. So sewers made accessible for inspection
and cleaning. In sewers that are not large enough to be entered, providing manhole at all
junctions of sewers, changes in direction and change in grade does this. The straight runs
that can be rodded out between manhole are limited in length 300 to 400’. For sewers less
than 24” in diameter. For larger sewers, they are up to 600’
DISPOSAL OF SEWAGE
Storm water
Strom water is collected in surface drains called catch drains, or in underground drains
and disposed off to the natural water courses with out any treatment
Sewage
Raw sewage is treated before discharging into watercourse. The daily load of solid
imposed upon domestic sewage about half a kilo per person per day. Industrial wastes
however, may be far more concentrated.
METHODS OF SEWAGE TREATMENT
1. Dumping
in this method, the refuse is dumped in low lying areas partly as a method of reclamation
of land. Because of bacterial action, refuse decreases considerably in volume and is
converted into humus. The method through popular in cities, is not quite satisfactory
because of the following drawbacks
The refuse is exposed to flies and rodents
It is a source of nuisance from smell and unsightly appearance
The loose refuse is dispersed by the action of wind
Drainage from dumps contributes to the pollution of surface and ground water
3. Incineration
It involves in burning of combustible refuse in an incinerator. All sorts of bacteria,
insects, etc. are destroyed and the remaining noncombustible ashes, metals etc have little
sanitation problems. The heat produced during burning of the refuse can be utilized for
the production of steam and other purposes. It is th most sanitary method of disposal of
refuse. It is recommended for crowded cities and populated areas due to lack of suitable
land. However, because of the large amount of smoke and gases emitted in this process, it
adds considerably to the air pollution problem.
4. Composting
Composting is a method of combined disposal of refuse and night soil or sludge. It is a
process of nature. In this, organic matter breaks down under bacterial action. This results
in the formation of relatively stable humus like material, called compost. It has
considerable manorial value for the soil. This method of refuse disposal is popular in
India. The following methods of composting are now in use.
Bangalore method
Mechanical composting
Bangalore method:
Composting is usually carried out in India by an anaerobic method, popularly known as
bangalore method. It is a satisfactory method of disposal of town wastes and night soil.
Trenches of 4.5 to 10m long, 1.5 to 2.5m wide and 0.9m deep are dug. Depths greater
than 0.9m are not recommended because of slow decomposition. The pits should be
located on leeward side by not less than 800m away from city limits. The trench is
alternately filled with layers of refuse (150mm) and night soil (50mm) till the heap rises
to 300mm above the ground level. The top layer should be of refuse, at least 250mm in
thickness. Then, the leap is covered with excavated earth. Within 7 days, because of
bacterial action, considerable heat (up to 70 degrees C) is generated in the compost mass.
This intense heat persists over 2 to 3 weeks. this serves to decompose the refuse and night
soil and to destroy all pathogenic and parasitic organisms. At the end of 4 to 6 months,
decomposition is complete. The resulting manure is a well-composed material of high
manorial value. A modification of the above method is the aerobic method called Indore
method of composting. The operation in filling the pit is similar to the bangalore method
except that the top 600mm portion of the trench is left unfilled. Turning of the mass is
then done at intervals of 5 to 7 days, twice or thrice thereby enabling material both
outside and inside to be fully decomposed aerobically under the action of atmospheric
oxygen. In addition, the pathogenic organisms and fly larvae are thoroughly destroyed.
The compost mass may be converted into humus in a period of 15 to 20 days.
Mechanical composting:
In this method, the refuse is first cleared of salvable materials such as rags, bones, metal,
glass and items which are likely to interfere with the grinding operation. It then
pulverized in order to reduce the size of particles to less than 40mm. The pulverized
refuse is then mixed with sewage in a rotating machine and incubated. The factors which
are controlled in the operation are a certain carbon-nitrogen ratio, temperature, moisture,
pH and aeration. The entire period of composting is completed in 4 to 6 weeks
In this method, the garbage is placed in air tight sealed tanks without air for 10 days, and
in presence of air for 15 to 20 days. If necessary, the drainage collected at the bottom of
the tank is recirculated to keep the garbage wet. The digested residue is stable and is good
soil conditioner
6. Pyrolysis
This is also known as destructive distillation. In this process, solid wastes are either
shredded until they are finely ground or partly shredded and then heated in an oxygen
free atmosphere. Most organic substances are split through a combination of thermal
cracking and condensation reactions into gaseous, liquid and solid fractions. This process
is high endothermic.
9. Vermiculture biotechnology
Vermiculture biotechnology is use for biotechnological conversion of solid wastes
‘Vermi’ means worms (earthworms) and ‘Culture’ means farming; thus, vermiculture is a
farming of earthworms. In this process, earthworms are harnesses as versatile natural bio-
reactors, which convert the organic solid waste into valuable by-product, the
vermicasting, a rich manure used in agriculture and horticulture. This technology is a
potential alternative, which offers an ideal low-cost solid waste-processing scheme of
sustainable agriculture on wasteland.
ELECTRICITY
An electric current is a flow of electricity carried by the electrons. Usually electric
current flows from a positive terminal to a negative terminal.
1. Hydroelectric stations
Hydroelectric installations produce electricity from energy of water. Large water
retaining structures are constructed across the river or valley, these structures are known
as dam. They help to obstruct the flow of natural water and impound large quantity of
water on the upstream side of the dam. Water thus impounded behind the dam is led
through pipes at the bottom of the dam to the powerhouse. In the power house the water
is fed into water turbines. Each water turbine in-turn, rotates generator. Cables carry
electricity produced by generator or overhead transmission wires to distant places as
desired.
2. Thermal stations
Here generators are allowed to run by steam obtained from heating the water by coal.
High-pressure steam is passed through tubes fitted round a wheel in required angle. Due
to pressure this wheel runs with high velocity. Usually generator is axiled to the wheels to
produced electricity
4. Photoelectric cells
This is a device based on the discovery that small particles of negative electricity called
electrons are emitted from the surface of certain metals, when light falls on it. But current
produced from this source is very small and cannot be used for electrifying a town or a
city
Transformer
Electricity produced in a generator is at relatively low pressure. To transmit large amount
of power at this voltage, comparatively larger sized transmission wires are required to be
use. Hence voltage is increased by many times. A transformer does this. A transformer ca
step up or step down the voltage.
Transmission of current
Transmission wires erected on transmission towers do electric current transmission.
While transmitting current to a great distance, there will be loss of voltage. This is again
raised to the required level by transformers.
Distribution
For distribution of electric current the whole town is divided into districts. In each district
a sub-station is constructed to supply current to the use in that district. Usually all the
substations are interlinked to form a grid so that in case of any break down in any one of
sub-stations, current can be supplied from other sub-stations.
The capacity of the sub-station is decided by the power consumption in that district. This
includes domestic and industrial consumption of the district.
TELECOMMUNICATION
World has been made to depend more and more upon these technical means of
communication, namely, telephone and telegraph, radio, television and printing; all
summed up on one word, telecommunications
Communication has become the pulse of the world and an essential part of human life
and human progress. The telegraphs and the telephone brought the new method of
communication. Probably the most remarkable feature of the age in which we live is the
rapidity of communication.
PLANNING STANDARDS
2. Shopping facilities
Level of shopping Population served No. of shops Average area Area of
per 1000 per shop in influence in
persons sq.m. km.
Neighbourhood and 3000 - 20,000 3 10 - 15 0.5 - 0.75
convenience centre
Community centre 50,000 - 75,000 2-3 20 1.5 - 3
(district level)
City centre 1,50,000 & above 3 -4 25 Entire city
Total for the city Entire city 8 - 10 20 Entire city
15 x 24 360
High income group 18 x 27 486
24 x 30 720
27 x 36 972
Public housing and multiple 90 x 90 8100
family plots (90 sq.m. per 90 x 180 and multiples of 90 16,200
family with 12 m. to 18m.
road)
Commercial
Area of plot in sq.m. Max. Percentage of coverage
Up to 100 80
100 - 300 75
300 - 400 70
400 - 500 65
500 - 1,000 50
1000 - 2000 40
Above 2000 35
Floor area ratio: 1.0 to 4.0
Industrial
Area of plot in sq.m. Max. Percentage of
coverage
Light industry 250 - 2000 50
Medium industry 2000 - 4000 40
Heavy industry Above 4000 35
Hierarchy of recreational open spaces in urban areas in terms of physical size and facility
standards
Category Population Area in Facility standards
per unit hectares
Totlot 500 0.05 Paved area, playground apparatus
area for small children
Children’s park 2000 0.2
Neighbourhood 1000 0.2
playground
Neighbourhood park 5000 0.8 Playground apparatus areas,
landscaped areas, multiple-use
paved areas
District park 25,000 5.0 Facilities of neighbourhood park,
tennis courts, football and lighting
for evening use, community center /
recreation buildings and swimming
pool
Regional park 1,00,000 40.0 Water resource, camping, nature
study picnicking
Outline the details required to be incorporated in the preparation of project estimate for
water supply scheme of a town
Financial aspect
Population
Quality of water
Rate of consumption
Sanitary survey of area
Sources of water supply
Topography of area
Trend of town development
Traffic:
Vehicles moving along a road or street
The number of people or the amount of goods moved from one place to another by
road, rail, sea or air
Transportation:
Conveyance used for going from place to place
The process of transporting or carrying goods and passengers from one place to
another.
Types of transport:
Road transport
Road is the path specially prepared for the movement of transport vehicles like carts,
trucks, buses, lorries, etc
Different types of roads generally constructed are
Water bound macadam road
The term Water bound macadam road is applied to a layer of broken stone aggregate that
is held together by the dust particles of stone and the water sprinkled during compaction
carried out by using roller
Bituminous road
Road surface formed of broken stone aggregate and bituminous binder is called
bituminous road. The selection of the type of bituminous surfacing, thickness of road
surface and the method of laying the bituminous surface depend on the volume of the
traffic and the intensity of the load transmitted by the traffic
Cement concrete road
Road constructed of cement concrete with or without steel reinforcement is called
concrete road. It is a rigid pavement.
DEFINITION OF TERMS
Travel time is the reciprocal of speed and is a simple measure of how ell a road network
is operating
Average speed is the average of the spot speeds of all vehicles passing a given point on
the highway
Time-mean speed is the average of the speed measurements at one point in space over a
period of time
Space-mean speed is the average of the speed measurements at an instant of time over a
space
Traffic density
Traffic density is the number of vehicles occupying a unit length of lane of roadway at a
given instant, usually expressed as vehicles per kilometer. Traffic volume is the product
of the traffic density and traffic speed.
The highest traffic density will occur when the vehicles are practically at a stand still on a
given route, and in this case traffic volume will approach zero
Traffic capacity
Traffic capacity is the ability of a roadway to accommodate traffic volume. It is
expressed as the maximum number of vehicles in a lane or a road that can pass a given
point in unit time, usually an hour. i.e., vehicles per hour per lane or roadway. Capacity
and volume are measures of traffic flow and have the same units. Volume represents an
actual rate of flow and responds to variations in traffic demand, while capacity indicates a
capability or maximum rate of flow with a certain level of service characteristics that can
be carried by the roadway.
Tentative equivalency factors or PCU values suggested by the IRC (Indian road congress)
S.no Vehicle class Equivalency factors
1. Passenger car, tempo, auto rickshaw, agricultural 1.0
tractor
2. Bus, truck, agricultural tractor-trailer unit 3.0
3. Motor cycle, scooter and pedal cycle 0.5
4. Cycle rickshaw 1.5
5. Horse drawn vehicles 4.0
6. Small bullock cart and hand cart 6.0
7. Large bullock cart 8.0
Network
Radio – centric Easy connection between radials Too many concentric rings
Radial and Prominent nodes and landmarks Similar to both radial and
Meets the public demand in the irregular plot sizes are obtained
TRAFFIC ENGINEERING
Traffic engineering is that branch of engineering which deals with the improvement of
traffic performance of road networks and terminals. Traffic engineering deals with the
application of scientific principles, tools, techniques and findings for safe, rapid,
convenient and economic movement of people and goods.
Traffic engineering embraces the host of devices with which thecity dweller is familiar:
stop and go signs at street intersections, slow-down warnings and speed limits, parking
limits and prohibitions, the policeman’s whistle, the ‘safety islands’ at points of boarding
street cars and buses and the one-way street. The list of these ‘solutions’ is long, but none
has singly, norin combination, brought any genuine relief of the traffic problem. The
devices are more appropriately described as stunts rather than solutions; they are
expedient measure to cope with immediate traffic problems in the form of first-aid
treatment and offer no real improvement in the capacity of the transportation system to
move people.
The study of traffic engineering may be divided into six major sections
Traffic characteristics
o Road user characteristics
o Vehicular characteristics
o Breaking characteristics
Traffic studies and analysis
o Traffic volume study
ALL THE BEST Page 129
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o Speed studies
o Origin and destination (O & D) study
o Traffic flow characteristics
o Traffic capacity study
o Parking study
o Accident studies
Traffic operation – control and regulation
o Traffic regulation
o Traffic signals
o Road marking
o Traffic islands
o Design of intersection
o Design of parking facility
o Highway lighting
Planning and analysis
o Traffic planning
o Transportation planning process
Geometric design
Administration and management
TRANSPORTATION PLANNING
Planning may be defined as the activity or process that examines the potential of future
actions to guide a situation or a system toward a desired direction, for example, toward
the attainment of positive goals, the avoidance of problems, or both
The most important aspect of planning is the fact that it is oriented toward the future. A
planning activity occurs during one time period but is concerned with actions to be taken
at various times in the future. However, although planning may increase the likelihood
that a recommended actin will in fact take place, it does not guarantee that the planned
action will inevitably be implemented exactly as conceived and on schedule.
The fundamental purpose of transportation is to provide efficient access to various
activities that satisfy human needs. Therefore, the general goal of transportation planning
is to accommodate this need for mobility. Within specific contexts, however, whose
mobility for what purpose, by what means, at what cost and to whom, and who should do
the planning and how are questions that are not amenable to easy answers. Contemporary
responses to these questions are largely rooted in history and have been influenced by a
confluence of many factors, including technological innovations, private interests, and
governmental policies.
TRANSPORT SURVEYS
Transport survey may be done for assessing the number of vehicles that pass through a
stretch of road which enables the planner to design the roads and also to designate the
location of the land uses as the trips are generated by the land uses only. Apart from this,
surveying is also conducted to assess the area required for parking particularly in the
developed countries, where the personalized vehicle ownership is much more and thus
parking of vehicles do create problems in the city centers and near the commercial areas.
Transport survey may be broadly be divided into two types name, traffic survey and
parking survey.
Traffic survey
Traffic surveys conducted form the basis for deciding the number of traffic lanes and
roadway width, pavement design and economic analysis of road project. Origin and
Destination surveys are very useful for deciding the alignment of the roads. Traffic
survey consists of three parts namely
Observation
Assessment
Designing and proposals
Observation is mainly done of the congestion of the streets and a probable solution
sought by taking into consideration the cost factor.
Assessment is also done on the kind of traffic that is flowing through the town. Hence,
traffic survey is of three types namely
Speed survey: to check the speed at which the vehicles move through a particular stretch
of road; for assessing the L.O.S. (Level of service) required and provide the same if
found safe and economical
Volume survey: to assess the kind of traffic that is flowing through the road and to find
out whether the existing carriage way width is sufficient for the present traffic and how
many more PCUs it can sustain in future.
Origin-destination (O-D) survey: to know how many of the incoming and outgoing
vehicles have their origins and destination in the town and how many are through traffic,
just passing by the towns thus uncreasing the congestion on the roads.
OD survey can be done by a cordon of surveyors, stationed at various points of
intersections and the survey can be conducted by
Direct Interview, e.g. stopping the vehicles and asking them about their origin and
destination
By observation of the registration numbers of the vehicles when they comein and
go out of the town
By attaching tags to the vehicles when they come into the town and collecting the
tags when they go out of it.
Parking survey
By parking surveys, the planner can know,
The number of vehicles parked in the central area at different times of a day
The number of frustrated parkers who wished to park in the central area bu have
parked somewhere else;
How many people habitually walk along the central area, as they know that there
is no parking space there
How many, because of this reason, go to other central area of the town.
DESIGN OF ROADS
Factors to be considered
Following are the factors which are to be by a planner while designing a town road
Destination: the points or centers or areas which are being linked up by the road are to be
studied with respect to their capacity f attracting the traffic
Importance of road: the overall importance of road with respect to the surrounding roads
is to be ascertained and accordingly, the facilities and dimensions are to be determined
Nature of traffic: the probable traffic to be carried by the road is studied with respect toits
intensity, peak periods, type of vehicles, parking facilities etc.
Use of road: the probable use to which the road is to be put up for maximum period
during the day is to be estimated.
traffic lanes flow Roads with no Roads with frontage Roads with free
and width frontage access, access, but no frontage access,
no standing standing vehicle parked vehicles &
vehicles, very and high capacity heavy cross traffic
little cross traffic intersections
Two lane One way 2400 1500 1200
(7.0 – 7.5
m)
Two lane Two way 1500 1200 750
(7.0 – 7.5
m)
Three lane One way 3600 2500 2000
(10.5 m)
Four lane One way 4800 3000 2400
(14 m)
Four lane Two way 4000 2500 2000
(14 m)
Six lane Two way 6000 4200 3600
(21 m)
INTERSECTION
Design criteria
The intersections are the places where the vehicles can change their directions. There are
various criteria for designing the intersections. They are
Type of road
Priority of movement
Volume of traffic
Allocation of land
Existing shape of intersection (i.e. T-junction, cross junction etc.)
Type of intersections
Intersections at grade
These include all roads, which meet at more or less the same level. The traffic maneuvers
like merging, diverging and crossing are involved in the intersections at grade. They are
further classified into
1. unchannelised intersections
2. channelised intersections
3. Rotary intersection
means of a bridge thus eliminating all crossing conflicts at the intersection. The grade
separation may be either by an over bridge or an under pass. Transfer of route at the
grade separation is provided by interchange facilities consisting of ramps.
PARKING AREAS
The parking facility can be grouped in the following two categories
Off-street parking: the vehicles are parked at a separate lace away from the kerb. This
facility avoids undue traffic congestion and delay on the road.
The effects of improper on-street or kerb parking on the urban environment are as
follows:
The haphazard parking spoils the aesthetics of road
The safety of various classes of road-users is adversely affected
The standing vehicles on road decrease the effective width of road and thus, the
traffic carrying capacity of road is reduced
The various methods adopted to grant the parking facilities on-street or off-street, are as
follows:
Basement floors and open spaces or margins around new buildings by the
implementation of suitable building bye-laws.
Constructing central parking stations in areas of high lnadvalue in the form of
multi-storey buildings with open walls and cheap construction
Constructing underground parking stations below parks and play grounds
Developing plots for off-street parking and charging a reasonable parking fee as
per type of vehicle and duration of parking
Installing parking metres for short duration parkingon roads
Kerbside parking with effective road marking techniques
Providing parking stations at ground level where land values are low etc.
HIERARCHY OF ROADS
The road system in the country are now classified into three classes, for the purpose of
transport planning, functional identification, earmarking administrative jurisdictions
andassigning priorities on a road network.
1. Primary system
primary system consists of two categories of roads:
Express ways are a separate class of highways with superior facilities
anddesign standards and are meant as through routes having very high volume
of traffic. The expressways are to be provided with divided carriageways,
controlled access, grade separations at cross roads and fencing. These
highways should permit only fast moving vehicles.
National highways (NH) are main highways running through the length and
breadth of India, connecting major ports, foreign highways, capitals of large
states and large industrial and tourist centers including roads required for
strategic movements for the defense of India.
2. Secondary system
Secondary system consists of two categories of roads:
State highways (SH) are arterial roads of a state, connecting with the national
highways of adjacent states, district head quarters and important cities within
the state and serving as the main arteries for traffic to and from district roads.
Major district roads (MDR) are important roads within a district serving areas
of production and markets and connecting those with each other or with the
main highways of a district. The MDR has lower speed and geometric design
specifications than NH/SH
Two lanes 9 --
3. Other District roads
Single lane 7.5 4.75
Two lanes 9 --
4. Village roads – single lane 7.5 4
Arterials and sub-arterials are streets primarily for through traffic on a continuous route,
but the sub-arterials have lower level of traffic mobility than the arterials. Collector
streets provide access to arterial streets and they collect and distribute traffic from and to
local streets which provide access to abutting property
Design speed pavement width per traffic lane and width of roadway
Classification of N.H. S.H. M.D.R. O.D.R. V.R.
highway Design speed (km. h)
Flat topography 80 80 64 48 32
Rolling topography
Mountainous area 48 48 40 32 24
Pavement width per 3.65 3 (desirable 3.65 )
traffic lane in metres
Width of roadway in metres
Flat topography 11.6 9.75 7.3 7.3 4.9
Rolling topography 11.6 9.75 7.3 7.3 4.9
Mountainous area 8 8 6.7 6.7 4.25
V.R. 12 12 - 18 24 30 9 9 - 15 ---
Gradient maximum
Ruling Limiting Exceptional
Flat topography 1 in 30 1 in 20 1 in 15
Rolling topography 1 in 30 1 in 20 1 in 15
Mountainous area 1 in 20 1 in 15 1 in 12
(Lengths in exceptional cases should not exceed 60m. in a kilometre)
(meters)
Off-street loading and unloading berths shall be 3.75 m x 7.75 m provided as below:
1. For all kinds of developments excepting residential warehouses and go downs:
One berth for initial 500 to 1500 sq.m of floor area. Additional berths at the rate of
one for every 1000 sq.m. or part thereof.
LOS
LOS
LOS
LOS
GATE ARCHITECTURE2010 Kavali.4shared.com
Level-of-service B is in the range of stable flow, but the presence of other users in the
traffic stream begins to be noticeable. Freedom to select desired speeds is relatively
unaffected, but there is a slight decline in the freedom to maneuver within the traffic
stream from LOS A. the level of comfort and convenience provided is somewhat less
than LOS A, because the presence of others in the traffic stream begins to affect
individual behaviour.
Level-of-service C is in the range of stable flow, but marks the beginning of the range of
flow in which the operation of individual users becomes significantly affected by the
presence of others, and maneuvering within the traffic stream requires substantial
vigilance on the part of the user the general level of comfort and convenience declines
noticeably at this level
characterized by stop-and-go waves, and they are extremely unstable. Vehicles may
progress at reasonable speeds for several hundred feet or more, then be required to stop in
a cyclic fashion. Level-of-service F is used to describe the operating conditions within the
queue, as well as at the point of breakdown. It should be noted, however, that in many
cases operating conditions of vehicles or pedestrians discharged from te queue may be
quite good. Nevertheless, it is the point at which arrival flow exceeds discharge flow
which causes the queue to form, and level of service F is an appropriate designation for
such points.
Operational speed
Operational speed is the speed at which traffic flows on the road. The operational speed
depends on the volume to capacity ratio of that particular road.
As the V/C ratio increases, the operational speed on the road decreases.
V/C Operational speed
0.1 Higher
0.5 Medium
0.8 Stop & go
1.0 Unstable
these, so that the most efficient use is made of the system. In doing so, minor alterations
to traffic lanes, islands, curbs etc. are inevitable, and part of the management measures.
The general aim is to reorient the traffic pattern on the existing streets so that the conflict
between vehicles and pedestrians is reduced.
Some of the well-known traffic management measures are
1. Restriction on turning movements
2. One-way streets
3. Tidal-flow operations
4. Exclusive bus-lanes
5. Closing side-streets
1. Engineering measures
Road design
Preventive maintenance of vehices
Before and after studies regarding accidents
Road lighting
2. Enforcement measures
Speed control
Traffic control devices
Training and supervision
Medical check
Special precautions for commercial vehicles
Observance of law and regulation
3. Educational measures
Education of road users
Safety drive
MODES OF TRANSPORTATION
Public transport like buses, rail, trams etc.
Intermediate public transport ( Para transit ) like auto-rickshaw, taxi etc and slow
vehicles like rickshaw
Other than public transport (i.e personified slow vehicles like cycle, and
personified fast vehicles like cars, bikes etc.)
and not to their ownership. For example, a city bus system may be owned either privately
or publicly. In either case, the service provided is public transportation because the
system is available for use by the public. For-hire systems are further classified into
contract carriers and common carriers. The former stand ready to provide service to the
public under individual contractual arrangements. Common carriers, on the other hand,
generally offer scheduled service and are open to all members of the public willing to pay
the posted fare. The terms mass transportation or mass transit usually refers to the
common carriage of passengers. Taxis, car rentals, and certain other individually
arranged services belong to the category of contract public transportation.
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