Urban India’s parking woes: an overview
Vehicular congestion and insufficient parking facilities are significant emerging challenges for India’s mega and metropolitan cities, severely impairing mobility. Although curtailed by constitutional
Vehicular congestion and insufficient parking facilities are significant emerging challenges for India’s mega and metropolitan cities, severely impairing mobility. Although curtailed by constitutional
Polluted groundwater cannot
Is incineration the best option for Mumbai s medical waste?
Apartments mushroom on contaminated industrial sites
Temple offerings in Mumbai make for good compost
Mumbai s Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilizers recycles sewage to run the cooling towers of its plants
MUMBAI FIRECRACKER: Tests carried out by Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB) and Awaaz Foundation, in Mumbai, found the
Recycling of tetra paks gets underway in Mumbai
Mumbai needs to grapple with real questions
<font class="UCASE"><b>July 26, 2005:</b></font> It began raining at 11 am. In the next 24 hours, India’s most populous city received 944 mm of rainfall. The resultant flood killed 450 people (officially), and caused financial damage worth about Rs 4,000
The rainfall of 26 July 2005, which deluged Mumbai city and parts of Mumbai Metropolitan Region (mmr), was unprecedented. In the city of Mumbai, water logging has been more or less an annual feature, but not flooding of this kind. It caused floods, the depth of which even reached near first floor levels at many places and almost submerged buses on roads.