Share your ideas for reviving Chennai’s Buckingham Canal and win a prize!

Eyes On The Canal, an initiative focused on reimagining Chennai's Buckingham Canal, has now floated an open call for ideas to raise awareness about urban climate change and propose solutions to improve the situation in and along the canal.

How can cities as drivers and victims of climate change cope with its risks and become custodians of a livable environment? Chennai, having already been directly affected by the effects of climate change, especially needs to find answers to this question.

EYES ON THE CANAL, an initiative focused on reimagining one of Chennai´s most important spatial and functional elements, the Buckingham Canal, has now floated an open call for ideas to raise awareness on the issue of climate change in urban areas and especially to propose visionary, but also feasible, solutions to improve the current situation alongside the canal.  How might we adopt a climate proof approach to make the canal a liveable space?

The broader context and importance

The Buckingham Canal is a manmade, saltwater, navigation canal that runs parallel to the Coromandel Coast in the north-south direction. Within the Chennai metropolitan area, the canal connects the three rivers – Kosasthalaiyar, Cooum, and Adyar – all of which are important for the canal’s water regime and are sensitive to and affected by climate change. Though primarily constructed to transport goods from Vijayawada to Madras, the canal also helps manage flood waters, and provides hence regulating ecosystem services that are vital for the city.

Archival photographs show the canal to be an idyllic setting with lush green edges and wooden catamarans cruising its course. Today, however, the canal is faced with severe pollution woes, with untreated sewage and solid waste finding their way into its waters, foreclosing its potential as a vivid waterway and place for recreation and belonging. The numerous encroachments too have severely compromised its width and carrying capacity over long stretches within the Chennai Metropolitan area and have drastically reduced the canals capacity as a source of livelihood for the population.

Over the years, various governmental agencies have attempted to revive the canal and continue to do so even to this date.

An open ideas competition

Ideas for reimagining the Buckingham Canal therefore need to

  • consider climate adaptation and/or mitigation measures
  • follow an integrated, holistic approach
  • involve participation of all stakeholders
  • promote the canal and its potential for sustainable and inclusive urban development and identity building
  • have a multi-disciplinary approach to the solutions

Ideas can be in the form of physical interventions like open space upgrading and built form inserts, laying out a road map for a circular water economy, design of participatory approaches, information campaigns, art projects, multi-stakeholder models for implementation, training measures, digital tools, engineering and technical solutions for cleaning of the canal, etc.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This call for ideas is centred on a 3.5 kilometre stretch between South of Adyar River (Kotturpuram MRTS Station) to Thiruvanmiyur MRTS Station for carrying out any intervention. Participants are, however, strongly encouraged to examine the entire canal to arrive at holistic, integrated solutions and keep in mind the chosen stretch only as a demonstration site for interventions.

The competition, its approach and results will be promoted globally and entries are meant to serve as examples of climate proof approach to urban development.

For more information related to the competition, the detailed brief may be downloaded at this link: Competition brief

The Competition registration link can be found here: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/registerforBC

Prizes and recognition

The 1st prize winners will have the chance to be financially supported with a grant worth INR 5,00,000 for a period of 3 months to further evolve their ideas collaboratively into tangible implementable solutions.

The 2nd prize winners will have the chance to be financially supported with a grant worth INR 3,00,000 for a period of 3 months to further evolve their ideas collaboratively into tangible implementable solutions.

The 3rd prize winners will have the chance to be financially supported with a grant worth INR 2,00,000 for a period of 3 months to further evolve their ideas collaboratively into tangible implementable solutions.

All three prize winners will get an opportunity to present, discuss and develop their ideas with international experts from Germany and India.

All three prize winners will get an opportunity to present their ideas to the concerned authorities in Chennai.

All three prize winning entries will be published in leading dailies / magazines.

Jury Panel

Srivathsan A., Ahmedabad India
Dr. Srivathsan is an architectural scholar and the Academic Director for CEPT University. He is a nationally recognized architectural critic and has worked as a senior journalist for eight years.

Karen Coelho, Chennai India
Dr. Karen Coelho is an urban anthropologist working as Assistant Professor at the Madras Institute of Development Studies (MIDS), Chennai, focusing on reforms in municipal governance, informal labour, urban ecologies, and urban civil society. She teaches modules on History of Development Thought and Ethnographic and Qualitative Methods at MIDS.

Sujatha Byravan, Chennai India
Dr. Sujatha Byravan works on science, technology, and development policy. She is a senior researcher at the Centre for Development Finance, Institute for Financial Management and Research, Chennai, where she focuses on climate change adaptation. She also works independently on biotechnology policy, innovation, gender, and science and sustainability. Byravan was previously president, Council for Responsible Genetics, Cambridge, Massachusetts and director, Fellows Programme, LEAD International, London.

Georg Jahnsen, GIZ New Delhi India / Germany
Mr. Georg Jahnsen displays a long multi-professional experience and expertise in the field of urban and land use planning based on a profound university study with a Masters Degree. Mr. Jahnsen’s previous professional experience is shaped by the practical work as a city and spatial planner in projects worldwide. He has worked as a german state official as Chief Town Planner for the City of Heide (northern Germany). Mr. Jahnsen has also worked on several scientifical projects as a research assistant and teacher at the University of Brunswick at the Institute for Urban and Land use Planning and as Program Manager for Raffles Design International University Mumbai, India. The common thread throughout his career is to archive a sustainable rural and urban development with the tools of an innovative spatial planning process as a key objective.

Klaus Illigmann (tbc) Munich Germany
Klaus Illigmann, is since 2003 head of section in the department of urban planning and building regulations in the main department I “Urban Development Planning” of the City of Munich in Germany. In this capacity he is also a representative of the city of Munich in the network Urban Energies. His main tasks include cross-section-oriented topics such as: the concept of the housing policy action program of the state capital “living in Munich”; the continuation of the Munich urban development concept “PERSPEKTIVE MÜNCHEN”; the coordination of activities on climate change and climate adaptation. He is a member of the dialogue platform “Smart Cities” of the Federal Ministry for the Environment.

[This has been collated entirely on the basis of information put out by the Eyes On The Canal initiative here.]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Mumbai Buzz: Two die in a manhole accident | Metro 3 trials begin and more…

Other news in Mumbai: Two children suffocate to death in abandoned car; Bombay HC rap for demolishing galas; Leopard captured at Vasai.

Two die, third critical after falling into manhole Mumbai continues to see tragic accidents related to manual scavenging and deadly manholes. Two people died and a third is critical after falling into a 30-foot-deep manhole in Malad. The manhole was connected to a drain pipe on the site of a private under-construction building at Pimpripada in Malad east. Raju, who was a worker at the site, fell in and after that two nearby residents, Aqib and Javed jumped to save him. When none of them came out, the locals called the fire brigade to rescue them. According to the preliminary…

Similar Story

Chennai Buzz: RTE admissions begin | Anna Nagar to get new parking system… and more!

In other news from Chennai: GCC urges residents to pay property tax; Government plans to denotify a part of Pulicat bird sanctuary

TN government's plans to denotify a portion of Pulicat Bird Sanctuary raise concerns Thirteen revenue villages were included within Pulicat Bird Sanctuary boundary limits in 1980. The state government has now begun rationalising its boundaries raising concerns over the shrinking of the sanctuary’s eco-sensitive zone (ESZ). According to a news report, a proposal for the use of 215.83 hectares of non-forest land for the development of an industrial park inside the ESZ, and 5 km from the bird sanctuary was discussed during the 77th meeting of the Standing Committee of National Board for Wildlife held in January 2024. With the…