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Mouchak-Moghbazar flyover opens to traffic

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http://www.thedailystar.net/city/dh...ime-minister-sheikh-hasina-bangladesh-1482022
October 26, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:42 PM, October 26, 2017
Mouchak-Moghbazar flyover opens to traffic
Star Online Report


Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today formally opened the 8.7km Mouchak-Moghbazar flyover to publicwith the 4km Malibagh-Razarbagh-Shantinagar section ready for traffic.
She inaugurated the flyover through video conferencing from her official Gono Bhaban residence at 12:35 pm.

Earlier, the flyover construction had drawn constant public wrath for tattered roads and traffic mismanagement underneath and was marred with accidents and onsite causalities time and again.

The premier in March last year inaugurated the first phase of two-kilometre four-lane carriageway section of the flyover stretching from Shaheed Captain Mansur Ali Sarani near Holy Family Hospital to Saat Rasta intersection (Shaheed Tajuddin Ahmad Sarani).

The project was originally scheduled to start in 2011 and completed by December 2015, but it started in 2013.

In January 2015, the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council approved a revision of the project with an extension of 18 months till June 2017 and an increase in the cost by Tk 446.2 crore.

The scheme is financed jointly by the Saudi Development Fund, OPEC Fund for International Development and the Government of Bangladesh.
 
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This is the second largest flyover in BD. Also among the longest 100 bridges in the world.
The scheme is financed jointly by the Saudi Development Fund
Thanks Saudis.
 
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iu
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Nipped in the bud: Two-storey traffic jam on Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover
Shahed Shafiq
Published at 10:03 AM October 27, 2017
Last updated at 11:35 AM October 27, 2017
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Hundreds of vehicles were stuck on the Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover after it was opened on Thursday |Shahed Shafiq/Bangla Tribune
'It seems that traffic congestion will continue to plague us'
Everyone had hoped that traffic congestion would ease to some extent after the much-awaited Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover was opened.

But barely hours after its inauguration on Thursday, the flyover had its first taste of traffic jam. As the day progressed, huge tailbacks were seen on the connecting roads.

The two-storey flyover was cramped.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina opened it around noon. But a massive gridlock took shape around 3pm as the traffic volume increased.

In the evening, the tailback had stretched beyond Mouchck intersection traffic signal from Iskaton. Microbus driver Sharafat Hossain was vexed like many others.

“It’s been nearly 45 minutes and I have not been able to reach Iskaton from the Mouchak part,” he said. “Only god knows when the traffic will ease.”
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The scene had played out from the flyover’s Rampura to Shantinagar and Razarbagh to Mouchak via Maligabagh stretches.

Shahjahanpur resident Arman Hossain was travelling to Razarbagh from Saat Raasta.

“The vehicle reached Wireless area quickly but then it was stuck in traffic on the first floor of the flyover’s Mouchak part. After that, it took nearly half an hour to reach Razarbagh,” he said.

A private company employee said there was traffic congestion on each floor of the flyover.

“The number of vehicles was fewer around noon but it increased in the afternoon,” he said. “The vehicles were getting stuck in traffic signals after getting down from the flyover and that led to long tailbacks.”
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The Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover was opened to ease traffic congestion | Shahed Shafiq/Bangla Tribune
Several hundred vehicles were stuck at the Mouchak and Malibagh traffic signals on the second floor of the flyover. The jam stretched to Mouchak from Iskaton because of the traffic signal at Bangla Motor area.

A similar situation was seen on the streets below the flyover where hundreds of vehicles were stuck in traffic signals.

It was different around noon when vehicles had to wait for a little while at signals after getting down from the flyover. Traffic signals from New Iskaton to Bangla Motor were released every eight to 10 minutes.

On the other hand, traffic congestion plagued the Saat Raasta-Moghbazar-Holy Family stretch. Vehicles were stuck from Moghbazar to Holy Family Hospital and from there to Saat Raasta.

But vehicles plied quickly from Shantinagar to Hazipara Shahidi mosque via Malibagh-Mouchak after waiting at the traffic signal for a while.
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Huge tailbacks were seen on the streets below the Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover | Shahed Shafiq/Bangla Tribune

“We had pinned our hopes on the flyover and thought we could get rid of the curse of traffic congestions once it was opened,” Iskaton resident Nizam Uddin said.

“From what we have seen after inauguration, it appears that the sufferings on the road would never leave us,” he said. “The familiar traffic congestion will continue to plague us.”

Flyover project director and LGED Engineer Sushanta Kumar Pal could not be reached for comments.

The flyover was constructed at a cost of Tk1,218.89 crore.

At the inauguration ceremony, Prime Minister Hasina had said that it would alleviate traffic jam and allow people to commute much easier and faster.
This article was first published on Bangla Tribune
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/dhaka/2017/10/27/gridlock-plagues-moghbazar-mouchak-flyover/
 
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Nipped in the bud: Two-storey traffic jam on Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover
Nothing to worry about this celebration traffic jam. It was a picnic day. So, people just flocked to the flyovers to enjoy a faster car riding that caused the jam.
 
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Will this ease the traffic inside Dacca is remain to be seen.

I don’t understand why there is no circular road around Dacca city?
 
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Will this ease the traffic inside Dacca is remain to be seen.

I don’t understand why there is no circular road around Dacca city?

It will cost hundreds of billions of Dhaka. It is very expensive to create a motorway all around Dhaka.
 
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There is not even one flyover inside NYC. You need to make more roads to ease traffic, not flyover.

I think the idiot politicians in BD are just copying what they are seeing in other parts of South and SE Asia.

From my layman's viewpoint, the solution to Dhaka's traffic problems are to build a huge motorway(6 lane) around Dhaka that will allow traffic to bypass it completely if required, and also speed up construction of the metro system that covers pretty much the whole of Dhaka. Yes this would cost 10-15 billion US dollars in total but spread over 10-15 years it would be affordable even for a poor country like BD.
 
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Are flyovers really the solution?
Shohel Mamun
Published at 01:15 AM October 25, 2017
Last updated at 08:06 AM October 25, 2017
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If the volume of vehicles continues to grow at the current pace, without substantial public transport support, the average speed of Dhaka’s traffic may fall to 4.7kph by 2035, which is essentially the speed of walking Syed Zakir Hossain
Flyovers have flattered to deceive in Dhaka, often exacerbating the traffic problems they were meant to solve

Even though flyovers can be effective in reducing travel time, in Dhaka they often contribute to traffic congestion because of faulty design and shortsighted planning, experts say.
Most of the flyovers opened with fanfare recently have been off-ramped at intersections, bringing vehicles converging to a traffic stop instead of going over it.

Flyovers can also cause congestion when the road capacity is full during peak hours and if the volume of vehicles travelling during that time is greater than the capacity of the flyover, which has consistently been the problem with the flyovers in Dhaka.

Experts that the Dhaka Tribune spoke to – Professor Shamsul Hoque of the department of civil engineering at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (Buet) and Dr Sarwar Jahan of the department of urban and regional planning, Buet -agreed that flyovers actually increase traffic rather than decrease them and will probably have to be demolished in the near future.

“I think the solution to traffic gridlock in Dhaka is public transport and traffic management as opposed to building flyovers which will eventually have to be demolished,” said Professor Shamsul Hoque.

Traffic management is the planning, monitoring and control of traffic. It is supposed to maximise the use of existing road space, using traffic operations enforcement, materials and equipment to achieve safe and efficient movements.

Traffic management science is dedicated to measuring speed, volume and density on roads to understand how the butterfly effect, free flow and congestion speed can be managed. In Bangladesh however, our biggest problems seem to be the tragedy of the commons-where one acts for himself instead of the common good and the fact that we only use 10% to 20% of usable road space because of road side parking, random bus stops and mismanaged lanes. Our moving speed is usually dictated by the slowest vehicle on the road, which are rickshaws that even clog the roads after 9pm.

When flyovers are added to this system without proper traffic management they function more like ramps

Data from the World Bank shows that in the last 10 years, the average traffic speed has dropped from 21 km/hour to 7 km/hour, only slightly above the average walking speed.
Congestion in Dhaka eats up 3.2 million working hours per day.

DMP’s Joint Commissioner of Traffic (South) Mofiz Uddin Ahmed told the Dhaka Tribune that they use a system called the DMP traffic management system, which is mainly a manual endeavour that assesses which roads need more clearing by the volume of cars present at a given moment.

When flyovers are added to this system without proper traffic management or designated lanes for certain vehicles and without rapid mass transit system (the progress of which has only been 12% in the last four years) they function more like ramps than reducing travel time.

The Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover attracted widespread criticism for two consecutive cost hikes and its faulty design; it was mistakenly designed for driving on the right side whereas, Bangladeshis roads drive on the left side.

Then there was the fact that the flyover pillars were randomly placed considering the utility lines along with a number of unnecessary dividers forcing traffic flow to slow down.

Moreover, this is the first flyover which will have traffic signals at the Mouchak and Malibagh intersection whereas such infrastructures are generally built to allow uninterrupted traffic flow.

A lot of these flyovers are constructed without consulting the Revised Strategic Transport Plan (RSTP) prepared by the Dhaka Transport Authority (DTCA) such as the Kuril flyover, Mayor Hanif flyover built by Dhaka South City Corporation (DSCC), and the soon to be opened the Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover, supervised by the Local Government Engineering Department.

“People who make them, have no accountability and this is affecting public movement. Every project has objectives. The Mogbazar-Mouchak flyover’s objective was fast traffic movement but these flyovers fall under two signals, negating the objective entirely. People who are responsible for building these flyovers do not even check if these objectives are met,” said Professor Shamsul Hoque.
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Road Transport and Bridges Minister Obaidul Quader said on August 21 no government agencies will make any transport related plans in Dhaka and adjacent districts without consulting the Revised Strategic Transport Plan (RSTP).

“A number of agencies including Rajuk and city corporations will make plans at random to construct flyovers or such a road network which is not to be allowed from now. If any government body would like to construct any infrastructure under the RSTP it would have to be approved by Dhaka Transport Coordination Authority (DTCA). The authority will also supervise and coordinate the projects,” the minister had said.

However, the proposed Motijheel-Jhilmil flyover which was not included in the RSTP originally, has been pushed into the plan by the DTCA because of heavy political pressure, sources say. The flyover goes over the area where a Bus Rapid Transit is supposed to be.

The problem with political pressure regarding traffic management also extends to the elevated expressway, which is not being constructed according to the feasibility study.
Because of the area that needed to be demolished for it, the plan met with strong resistance from local lawmakers and the government was forced to change the original design.
As a result, the elevated expressway now crosses over the Mayor Hanif flyover at 70 feet, which probably will not come to fruition, according to experts.

Sources at Dhaka South City Corporation (DSCC) said after consulting with planners and engineers Mayor Mohammad Sayeed Khokon has decided to demolish all the dividers under the Mayor Mohammad Hanif Flyover to reduce traffic jam under the flyover.

However, the mayor has not been able to implement the plan because of a legal battle with the flyover’s private construction partner Orion Group.

Professor Shamsul Hoque thinks flyovers cannot offer traffic management during peak hours; they are at best temporary unsustainable solutions.

A study by Copenhagen Consensus Center found that the average traffic speed of Dhaka is now at 6.4kph
. If the volume of vehicles continues to grow at the current pace, without substantial public transport support, the average speed of Dhaka’s traffic may fall to 4.7kph by 2035, which is essentially the speed of walking.

Dr Sarwar Jahan told the Dhaka Tribune:“When the government constructed the Mohakhali Flyover, the authorities concerned did not know that more flyovers will be built at Banani and Kuril on the same road.”

Finance Minister AMA Muhith, in his budget speech for FY 17-18 proposed an initiative to construct another flyover in Dhaka. “The 12km flyover from Shantinagar to Dhaka-Mawa road would be built to ease traffic congestion of the capital city,” he said.

If the solution to Dhaka’s ever growing traffic problem seems to be more public transport, then why is the government spending millions of dollars building flyovers that will eventually have to be demolished?

In an attempt to treat the symptoms of the problem but not the problem itself, say experts, we are shooting ourselves in the foot by wasting public funds that could have been diverted towards developing the metro rail system and the rapid bus transit much faster.

Additional reporting by Abu Hayat Mahmud
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/dhaka/2017/10/25/flyovers-put-city-bind/
 
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Will this ease the traffic inside Dacca is remain to be seen.
I don’t understand why there is no circular road around Dacca city?
Your suggestion is correct to the point that a circular motor way is needed in Dhaka. When the flyovers are being constructed, there is an ongoing delayed process of building the 23km expressway. I am not sure if this can be extended to make a loop and connected with all the flyovers. So, there will be a crisscross of motorways. However, the gridlock will continue because there are almost no parallel bypasses a little away from the main existing roads. The bypasses must be connected at an angle with the existing roads to diversify the traffic. I think, Dhaka traffic jam will continue until when the Dhaka Metro rail starts operating.
 
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Your suggestion is correct to the point that a circular motor way is needed in Dhaka. When the flyovers are being constructed, there is an ongoing delayed process of building the 23km expressway. I am not sure if this can be extended to make a loop and connected with all the flyovers. So, there will be a crisscross of motorways. However, the gridlock will continue because there are almost no parallel bypasses a little away from the main existing roads. The bypasses must be connected at an angle with the existing roads to diversify the traffic. I think, Dhaka traffic jam will continue until when the Dhaka Metro rail starts operating.
There are bottlenecks in every entry and exit point of Dhaka. Dhaka is too small and congested as it can't expand due to the gridlock at Gabtoli, Tongi and Syedabad. We need to address these issues and let Dhaka expand beyond its core.

We need North-South and East-West overhead expressways along with circular road encompassing Narayanganj, Gajipur and Purbachal. Those roads has to be overhead and extend beyond the city limits. I think that will give dhaka the breathing space which is needed. Besides these roads has to be toll free so that people are encouraged to use them.
 
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Besides these roads has to be toll free so that people are encouraged to use them.
Everything I agree with your post. But there is nothing called free lunch in this world. How can a expressway system sustain without collecting tolls from the users? Users must pay for using the roads. Otherwise, there will be no money for their maintenance and new expressways cannot be built due to shortage of money. However, if you discover oil same as Saudi Arabia in volume, the export money can be used to fill in the govt coffer that can eliminate toll.
 
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Everything I agree with your post. But there is nothing called free lunch in this world. How can a expressway system sustain without collecting tolls from the users? Users must pay for using the roads. Otherwise, there will be no money for their maintenance and new expressways cannot be built due to shortage of money. However, if you discover oil same as Saudi Arabia in volume, the export money can be used to fill in the govt coffer that can eliminate toll.
These are core vital artery, govt should pay for them. Auxiliary roads can be made as toll roads like what we see in USA called turnpikes.
 
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