Saddi Delhi – Our
The Commonwealth Games are around the corner, and with development on various fronts having been expedited in the past few years, the city can finally be said to have taken its place among the great metropolises of the world.
Where there were once elevated heaps of rubble that you had to maneuver your way around, there are now completed flyovers. A new high-capacity bus service ensures that buses stay in their own lane, segregated from the rest of the road.
No traces of the Metro are visible where they shouldn't be; it's connecting all parts of the city with quiet efficiency. Load shedding is a term youngsters have to look up in the dictionary.
That scenario may not be as improbable as it sounds. When the plans drawn up for city development by the various authorities are implemented, we could see the emergence of one of the world's great metropolises. Ten thousand buses will be replaced by 2009. The new vehicles will have pneumatic doors, low floorboards to ensure easy boarding and alighting, and an automatic vehicle tracking system for monitoring purposes. One joke has it that one of the ways to tell that you're among
On the power front, more generating units are in the planning. Land in Bawana, north
But a city needs more than just its civic infrastructure to qualify as a world city. In recent years, that's one aspect that has already gained a fair bit, with hotels and restaurants, theatre and world food, multiplexes and malls storming its cultural landscape. The international airport, however slowly, is due for privatizations. There are more golf courses and leisure parks, residential apartments with penthouses and swimming pools and health clubs; services -- everything from restaurant takeaways to groceries -- are on call.
On any evening, there are art shows and international bands performing at prominent venues. The signs are all there for
But these things are in pipeline and going slowly. We have to wait and watch to see how the things will change around.