Despite drawbacks, Thiru Vi Ka Park is clean and well-maintained
The Hindu
Despite drawbacks, Thiru Vi Ka Park is clean and well-maintained
Happy squeals abound from the children’s play area at the Thiru Vi Ka Park in Shenoy Nagar on a weekday evening, as children slide, climb, see-saw, swing and bang enthusiastically on a giant drum-cum-xylophone. Parents and grandparents watch indulgently from a bench that surrounds the section, as even the damp sand after the morning’s rain does not deter these pleasure-seekers.
It’s hard to remember that the 8.8-acre park has a somewhat tumultuous past: involving protests, a case in court, the inspection by a Madras High Court judge, and numerous delays in its restoration and opening.
In 2011, the park was shut down as Chennai Metro Rail Ltd. (CMRL) took over the space to build its underground Shenoy Nagar station. The park was supposed to be reopened in three years, but actually only opened this April, six years after the Metro line became operational.
The intervening 12 years saw a protest by residents who wanted their lung space back, as well as an inspection by Justice M. Dhandapani and, this August, an inspection by the Chennai district green committee, alongside a five-member committee constituted by the court.
The primary problem has been the lack of adequate green cover: the park had 328 trees before CMRL took over and felled 242, while translocating an additional 56. Though CMRL says it has planted 4,800 saplings through the Miyawaki method and nearly 600 other saplings, for old-time park users, it’s not the same.
“It was very sad to watch the trees being cut down. It used to be like a green forest, with so many birds. Now, however, there is not much shade,” said Subhashini Rao, a 74-year-old resident and regular walker at the park.
Another problem, says Mrs. V. Padmanabhan, also a senior citizen, is that the benches do not have backrests, and since they are granite, they are scalding to sit on in the summer. A gazebo with seating that could also provide cover during the rain would be useful, the walkers said.
One dies, eight hospitalised after inhaling HCL fumes at pharma company in Andhra Pradesh’s Anakapalli district. About 400 litres of HCL leaked from the reactor-cum-receiver tank at Unit-III of the company, which affected nine workers, says Collector. While the condition of six of them is stable, two are on ventilator support. Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu directs authorities to provide advanced treatment to the victims. Home Minister Anitha expresses anger over repeated such incidents.