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Delhi’s Rain Basera - An Illusion of Urban Shelters

2023-04-20 15:47:25

Residents chatted to find food, and some lucky people like chicken and lamb's intestines. The little people took time to walk around, these small bags were marked by their puppies in their hut and shared with 20 strange people without any education or future prospects It was. All these are only valuable insight into the 'immortal' aspect of our society; epic Utopia Delhi culture, her prosperity grows dramatically and she chooses to ignore poverty at hand Did.

By 2050, experts estimate that there are still 3 billion urban dwellers, many of whom live in big Asian cities. These large cities like Jakarta, Delhi, Manila have housed millions of urban poor who lack adequate housing, education, medical care, basic sanitation facilities or access to clean water It was. In order to reduce poverty, improve health and increase economic output, we must build a sustainable, inclusive and fair city. This is what the government, NGOs and companies can benefit from.

A few years later my father moved from Kolkata to Delhi, after a long journey at Kolkata Metro, worked at Delhi Metro and opened a new city railroad in the capital of India. This route goes through the tough Delhi community called Shahdara on the banks of the Yamuna River. On the night before it opened, the local gangsters torn many shining handrails, doors, bolts, fittings and fixtures and hinges. This shocked my father. This country, he suffers, as if it does not want good things. It is such that no one wants to destroy it immediately, good things, effective things, nothing to see.

The theme of repeated urban flood disasters in Indian cities is the collapse of the building structure caused by sustained rainfall and indifference of administration. Two days after the storm began in Mumbai, a five-story building collapsed in the crowded Bhendi Bazar district in southern Mumbai. At least 24 people were killed and 34 people were injured. Another building also follows the same fate last year. Cities like Delhi and Chennai are doing the same story at some point. The unique symbol of ancient Indian cities is a considerable share of aging aged buildings. Some of them came from colonial past. Despite being marked as non-resident and dangerous by citizen authorities, people continue to live there. After the rain continued, the groundwater level rose, destroying the foundations of these buildings making it unstable. Unbearable load further crushes the foundation pillar, eventually giving way to the collapse of the entire structure