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| Mysore Palace |
Mysore is one of the best cities of India. Blessed with a very pleasant climate all round the year and with its many attractions, it is a major tourist destination of India. Mysore is a moderate sized city, with a population of 15 Lakhs, in the southern part of Karnataka state in India. Located almost in the middle of the Deccan plateau at an altitude of 2,700 feet above MSL, and situated close to the banks of river Cauvery on its southern side.
Mysore city became the capital of the princely state of Mysore, after the British defeated Tippu Sultan, the then ruler of the kingdom of Mysore in 1799, and shifted the capital from Srirangapatna to Mysore. At that time Mysore was a small town, next to the Chamundi hills. Now Mysore has grown in to a city of 15 Lakh residents and provides a good case study for the following aspects:
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| Mysore Location |
Mysore city became the capital of the princely state of Mysore, after the British defeated Tippu Sultan, the then ruler of the kingdom of Mysore in 1799, and shifted the capital from Srirangapatna to Mysore. At that time Mysore was a small town, next to the Chamundi hills. Now Mysore has grown in to a city of 15 Lakh residents and provides a good case study for the following aspects:
1. Growth of the present cities of India.
2. The effect of the growth of cities on the rulers and the residents
3. The good and bad effects of the administration on the growth of the
city according to the quality, ability and commitment of the administrators.
4. Lessons to be learnt on observing such city growth.
5. How
these lessons can be used to not only build better cities for tomorrow but also
to avoid the ill effects and distribute the benefits to the right people, with
fairness and justice.
Here is a study and analysis of the growth of Mysore city by the
author of this paper who is a civil engineer by profession. The author has
observed and studied the growth of Mysore since the last 40 years and has been
an active participant in the growth of Mysore. He has developed a residential
area of one hundred acres in which 50,000 trees are also grown and this area is
now a part of the Mysore city.
Phases of Development of Mysore
Land use and land coverage change, its unwritten rules, and lessons for a better future.
Mysore is a fairly well planned
city that has developed over the last 120 years, from a town inside a fort
covering 2 sq kms into a busy urban agglomeration spread over 200 sq kms.
Observation and study of this growth throws up enormous knowledge and many
lessons through its impact on the residents, administrators and the migrants
into it. A careful analysis and application of this knowledge holds the benefit
of better cities tomorrow as well as justice and fairness to all.
Mysore over 120 years
Phase 1.
By 1890
Mysore was a town mostly inside the fort, covering an area around two square km,
and it was the capital of the princely state of Mysore under the British
control. Then the Maharajas of Mysore expanded it into a beautiful city over the
six decades by the following actions:
1.
Building planned layouts all around this town, and allotting it to the
residents of the fort and the surroundings. The allotment was done according to
their professions as well as financial and social position.
2.
Acquiring all the existing buildings inside the fort and the surroundings and
demolishing them.
3.
Building a majestic palace inside the fort and lush green gardens and parks all
around in place of the demolished buildings.
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| Krishna Raja Wodeyar IV |
By
1930 Mysore became one of the most beautiful cities of the world. And with its
other attractions
like the Brindavan gardens, the Zoo, the Dasara celebrations and many more,Mysore
became a great tourist attraction.
In this period, the city and the
state of Mysore were very well administered. Once in the 1930s, Mahatma Gandhi
came and stayed with the Maharajas of Mysore. Having seen the perfect
administration, he praised the governance and called the state of Mysore, as
‘Rama Rajya’.
In this
phase, there was proper planning and its enforcement and enormous value in
wealth and well being was generated to everyone, i.e. the rulers and the ruled.
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| Mysore in 1940 |
Phase 2.
A mixed picture in the next six
decades:
After
independence the city grew rapidly – well, mainly due to the population
explosion and the village dwellers’ migration towards the cities. But there was
neither the strict control nor the genuine will and effort to plan and enforce
beauty and order. The demand for housing generated two kinds growth.
Type 1.
The planned residential layouts like Siddhartha layout in the eastern side, the
Vijayanagara 1st to 4th stage towards the west, the Hebbal
industrial layout, and many more alike.
Type 2.
The unplanned, unauthorized and ugly developments, in the middle of as well as
beyond the planned layouts, which have come up due to the huge demand for
residential land and the selfish interests of individual property developers.
While
the unauthorized developments completely spoilt the beauty of the city and the
comfort of the dwellers, the planned layouts have contributed very little. This
is because of the inefficiency and selfish greed of the administrators.
Phase 3.
Mysore Today:
Today
Mysore is a city spread over 200 sq km, and it is a mixture of three kinds of
developments.
1. The
well planned and strictly regulated.
2. The
moderately planned and poorly regulated.
3. The
unplanned and unregulated.
This
blended urban agglomeration raises many questions, but a study of the process
and the reason for the problems faced today also yields the answers to these
questions.
Questions
and the answers together form the knowledge that is put across as the unwritten
rules below:
Rule 1. The process
of building a city is a natural resource of wealth:
In
phase 1 of the development of Mysore, the palace and the parks around it, which
were built by clearing the small township inside the fort and surroundings, are
eve today huge assets as lung space and objects of beauty. Further, by forming
new settlements in well regulated order, each house and the land it is built
upon got very high financial value. This value is severalfold more than the
cost incurred in forming the layout and the cost of building.
Wealth
created by the growth of a good city has no parallel. An acre of vacant land,
valued at Rs. 5 lakhs in today’s prices, when it becomes part of a well planned
city will be valued at Rs.10 crores in a moderate city and up to Rs.100 crores
in a metropolis at today’s value itself.
Rule 2. The wealth
created by building a city is proportional to the quality of the city:
When a
city is built, wealth is generated because of change in land-use pattern. All
over the world, the value of land in the city is almost a hundred times the
value of agricultural land. Further, the value also depends on the quality of
the residential area.
In the case
of Mysore, we have three types of developments and the value and comfort in
them is proportional to the quality of the planning and its execution. The
developments in phase 1 have the highest value. In phase 2, the value of land
in planned developments is moderate, but still far higher than in the unplanned
unauthorized layouts.
Wealth created by the growth of a good city is unparalleled. An acre of vacant land valued at five lakhs in today’s prices; when it becomes part of a well planned city, it will be valued at 10 to 100 crore at today’s value itself!
Rule 3. City
building can create crime, corruption and power struggle:
The
vast wealth that is generated naturally triggers human greed. The strict
enforcement that is needed to achieve a proper planned growth tends to get
violated by corruption. The high value generated by urbanization also triggers
every individual to try to get a share of it and then there arise land
disputes, forgeries, and the land mafia.
Even in
situations where there are no violations, whenever residential layouts are
developed by private individuals and companies, huge bribes are demanded. This
is because of the sudden change in the value of the land due to its change of
usage and the administrators wanting a share out of it.
The
corruption is of such a large scale that administrators fight for the some posts
of their choice and a struggle for power follows.
Rule 4. City
building has its victims and beneficiaries:
While
agricultural lands in the surroundings of Mysore were acquired by the
government, the land acquisition laws were applied. The land acquisition laws
in India give high powers to the government. The government can simply notify
and take into its possession the lands of the farmers for whatever purpose it
wishes. The farmers then have to stand in front of the land acquisition
officers for their financial compensation. This compensation has always been
fixed at very low levels. This process of land acquisition has victimized many
innocent farmers.
On the other hand, those who could get the
allotment of the plots of land developed by the government have seen their
investment appreciate by several hundred times. A site measuring 40’ x60’,
which was allotted in Vijayanagar 1st stage for Rs.35, 000/- in the 1980s,
is today worth over Rs. One Crore. This appreciation of three
hundred times is probably acceptable in the case of genuine users of the land who
have built houses and live in them, but in the case of those who have bought
and kept vacant plots of land as an investment it is an unfair, disproportionate
benefit.
What is more, several people have
got their lands freed from land acquisition through unfair means and have benefited
by the huge value addition, without making any contribution to city building.
The other victims of urbanization
are the common people who need housing. Since the appreciation of land value
due to city building creates hoarding of vacant land, the people who actually
need to build a house become the victims and either pay a hefty price or settle
for a house outside the city.
We need to make sure that the wealth generated by the city growth reaches either the real users of the land or the government, and then through it to all the citizens and not the land grabbers and the corrupt administrators.
For a better Tomorrow:
Now,
seeing these developments over the last 120 years, we should be able to not
only build better cities but also make sure of a fair and just system, without
giving room for corruption and crime.
We need
to make sure that the wealth generated by the city growth reaches either the real
users of the land or the government, and then through it all the citizens and
not the land grabbers and the administrators.
The
following steps, if adopted, can achieve the above objective.
1.
When
a city is developed, substantial portion of the land shall be kept as reserve
land by the government.
2.
Private
individuals and companies shall not be allowed to own vacant land inside the
cities and profit by it, without contributing to city in any form.
3.
The
government shall sell/auction the reserve land after the city is fully built,and
after land prices have reached the peak.
4.
The
proceeds of this sale/auction shall be such a major revenue for the government
that taxes on people by the government can be reduced substantially.
These steps can make a major
change in achieving fairness and justice, in addition to building better cities.
© Copyright 2014 Venugopal V.R. All rights reserved.
© Copyright 2014 Venugopal V.R. All rights reserved.





