{"id":12922,"date":"2022-11-25T11:38:36","date_gmt":"2022-11-25T06:08:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/paani.earth\/?page_id=12922"},"modified":"2022-12-15T10:17:32","modified_gmt":"2022-12-15T04:47:32","slug":"koramangala-challaghatta-kc-watershed","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/paani.earth\/regions\/bengaluru_homepage\/koramangala-challaghatta-watershed-homepage\/koramangala-challaghatta-kc-watershed\/","title":{"rendered":"Koramangala-Challaghatta (KC) Watershed"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
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Hydrology of Koramangala-Challaghatta (KC) Watershed<\/h4>\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/section>\n\t\t\t\t
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The map shows the significantly altered urban hydrology, including the famed interconnected lake system for lakes > 3 acres. The lake area, lake custodian, and current state of lake development are given. Lakes ( >3 acres) driven to extinction are identified, and their current land use recorded. Stressors such as Industrial Areas, Quarries & Sewage Treatment Plants & Major Roads are marked.<\/big><\/p>

The \u00a0narrative below gives insights and resources<\/strong> that activists can use. The narrative also takes the KC watershed and Dakshina Pinakini river<\/a> discourse from generalities to specifics backed by ample evidence.<\/big><\/p>

Frequently Asked Questions(FAQs) are at the bottom of the page. Please refer to them and read the narrative before writing to us.<\/big><\/p>

Click Image to load the map. Scroll down to read the narrative & FAQs. The map will be updated without prior notice. Check the Updated date and Version number on the map itself.<\/strong><\/big><\/p>

\"Hydrology<\/a>
Hydrology Map of Koramangala-Challaghatta Watershed<\/figcaption><\/figure>

About Koramangala-Challaghatta (KC) Watershed:<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>

The shape of the map is that of the KC watershed. Multinational technology companies like Microsoft, Amazon, Wipro, Infosys, Accenture, Capgemini, Bosch, Cisco, and many more have major offices here. KC watershed is one of the fastest growing areas of Bengaluru<\/a> with high population density.<\/big><\/p>

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The total number of lake waterbodies of all sizes, of both existing and extinct lakes are shown in the image. The map identifies lakes >3 acres. Bengaluru was once known as the land of thousand lakes. However, the rate at which the lakes have disappeared and are disappearing, Bengaluru may as well be known as the land of extinct lakes.<\/big><\/p>

The distribution of lakes by size is captured later in the narrative.\u00a0<\/big><\/p>

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The images below shows the administrative spread of the watershed.<\/big><\/p>

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\"Adminstrative<\/a>
Adminstrative Spread of the Watershed<\/figcaption><\/figure>

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The KC watershed forms 35.5% of Bengaluru City Municipality – Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) as shown in the \u00a0image below. <\/big><\/p>

The 35.5% \u00a0is completely concretized. <\/big>The new Bengaluru city municipality- Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) \u00a0boundary, per the Govt of Karnataka notification dated 14-17-2022<\/a>, was obtained from OpenCity<\/a>. The area of the BBMP boundary based on the GIS package received from Open city is 716 sq.kms.<\/big><\/p>

The KC watershed forms 1% of the larger Dakshina Pinakini River Basin<\/a> as shown in the image below. Though the watershed only forms 1%\u00a0 of the larger Dakshina Pinakini River Basin<\/a>, it is the biggest polluter of the river. The waste: Industrial effluents, raw sewage, and solid waste flow into the river, asphyxiating the Dakshina Pinakini river<\/a>.<\/big><\/p>

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Altered Man-Made Hydrology & its data sources:<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>

Hydrology, Rajakaluves, Storm Water Drains, Streams & Drainage are all the same. These are the network of streams that eventually take monsoon run-off to the Dakshina Pinakini river. However, because of Urbanization, Industrialization, and Concretization, natural drainage and topography have changed significantly. Thus, there is no natural hydrology, only man-made hydrology .<\/big><\/p>

A definitive data source of man-made hydrology does not exist, even for government planning and decision-making, esp. for flood prevention and mitigation (Urban flooding is extremely severe and quite common in this watershed). This deficiency was flagged by the Comptroller Auditor General (CAG) of India in its 2021 report \u2018Performance audit of management of storm water in Bengaluru Urban area<\/a>\u2019. \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/big><\/p>

Although not definitive, two government sources exist. Bengaluru Development Authority’s (BDA’s) Revised Master Plan (RMP) for Bengaluru (2031) and BBMP’s Major Storm Water (MSWD) drain map (Aug 2014). The RMP’s 2030-proposed land use map and 2015-existing land use map data have been combined, analyzed, and harmonized with BBMP’s MSWD to form the base drainage layer. <\/big><\/p>

The BDA’s 2030-proposed land use map is integrated to show how the BDA plans to upgrade the existing drainage in the context of lakes and rivers. The proposed drainage is similar to BBMP’s MSWD(Aug 2014) and has the same missing lake connections – Halnayakanahalli, Junasandra, Pattandur Agrahara Devarakere & Byrasandra. <\/big><\/p>

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1876 Revenue Map PC: Sandeep Anirudhan<\/figcaption><\/figure>

The connectivity of Pattandur Agrahara lake was updated on the map after the citizens alerted us by sending the revenue map data<\/a>, as shown in the image. The connectivity of Halynayakanahalli lake on the map is again based on citizen reporting. Byrasandra lake connectivity is based on the Cadastral map. Lack of connectivity and extremely narrow drain (if it exists) is one of the many reasons the areas around these lakes flood<\/a>. <\/big><\/p>

Additionally, the drainage for areas marked as industrial is non-existent. We augmented some of these drainages by referring to Cadastral maps ( survey done in the 1900s) & Survey of India Toposheets (survey done in the 1970s).<\/big><\/p>

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Lakes and its data sources:<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>

The map shows extinct lakes (> 3 acres), existing lakes(> 3 acres), and their interconnectivity.The pie chart shows the division of existing lakes by size. 71% of the Lakes are > 3 acres and are marked on the map.<\/big><\/p>

\"Existing<\/a>
Existing Lakes of the watershed<\/figcaption><\/figure>

There are two sources of existing lake data for the BBMP area. One is on the BBMP website<\/a>, and the other is \u2018Waterbodies Inventorisation in Bengaluru Metropolitan Area (BMA)\u2019 done by the Environmental Management and Policy Research Institute(EMPRI), a Karnataka state government research wing under the Department of Forest Ecology and Environment. <\/big><\/p>

The data from EMPRI\u00a0 was validated with cadastral maps, Survey of India Toposheets<\/a> (D43R12_57G12, D43X9_57H9), BDA\u2019s RMP (2031), BBMP\u2019s MSWD (Aug 2014), Koliwad Committee Report on encroachments<\/a> and European Commission\u2019s Global Surface Water Explorer<\/a>. We found EMPRI data, prepared by referring to the Department of Survey Settlement and Land Records (SSLR), to be reliable and comprehensive. The area of the lake recorded on the map is from EMPRI.<\/big><\/p>

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EMPRI is an excellent reference<\/span><\/strong> for all stakeholders. It has five volumes.<\/span><\/big><\/p>

  1. Volume-I<\/span><\/span><\/a><\/big><\/li>
  2. Volume \u2013 II (Part 1) Bengaluru North Taluk<\/a><\/big><\/span><\/li>
  3. Volume-II (Part 2) Bengaluru East Taluk<\/a><\/big><\/span><\/li>
  4. Volume \u2013 II (Part 3) Anekal Taluk<\/a><\/big><\/span><\/li>
  5. Volume-II (Part 4) Bengaluru South Taluk\u00a0<\/a><\/big><\/span><\/li><\/ol>

    About \u2018The \u00a0Great Urban Lake Extinction\u2019 and its contribution to urban floods:<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>
    \"Extinct<\/a>
    Extinct Lakes of the Watershed<\/figcaption><\/figure>

    Extinct lakes are lakes that have been converted for other land uses. EMPRI calls them disused. We call them ‘Extinct,’ a more appropriate term. Extinct lakes are included in the map to show how their extinction has altered the flow of water and has played a role in aiding & exacerbating urban floods in the watershed.<\/big><\/p>

    The pie chart shows a significant number of smaller lakes have gone extinct. The numbers indicate that lakes <3 Acres face a disproportionately higher risk of extinction when compared to lakes >3 acres. A whopping 89.9% of the lakes of size < 3 acres have gone extinct.\u00a0<\/big><\/p>

    It is logical to repurpose these smaller waterbodies as recharge structures. As can be seen in the pie chart above, about 43% of existing lakes are <3 acres. We must prioritize these areas and repurpose them as legally protected recharge structures before we lose them. Treated wastewater from sewage treatment plants can be channeled here for recharge. It could also be part of the ‘A Million Recharge Well<\/a>‘ project that was started by the voluntary citizen network Friends of Lakes (FOL) and Biome Environment Trust. Similar to the citizen’s MOU with BBMP on lakes, an MOU with the govt to build recharge structures can be explored.<\/big><\/p>

    The extinct lakes data is primarily sourced from EMPRI\u2019s disused lakes list. One exception to EMPRI\u2019s disused list is Koramangala Lake. National Dairy Research Institute occupies 80 of the 99-acre lake, and because of this\u00a0 80% encroachment, we are classifying Koramangala lake as extinct.<\/big><\/p>

    \"Overtopping
    Overtopping of Bellandur Lake PC:@nitinkr1991\/twitter<\/figcaption><\/figure>

    It is obvious from the map that upstream of Bellandur Lake on the Koramangala Stream and Challaghatta stream is where much of the lake extinction has occurred. The extinct lakebeds, now impervious, coupled with the concretization of stream beds, not to mention the completely built-up catchment, all dramatically increases the speed at which water moves. This context helps us better understand the overtopping of Bellandur lake<\/a> during the recent spate of unprecedented rains. A considerable volume of water sped through the concrete jungle towards Bellandur Lake, overtopping it and severely flooding the downstream communities<\/a>.<\/big><\/p>

    Another flood-related insight from the map pertains to Ulsoor lake. The 100-acre Ulsoor lake is the only non-extinct lake in Challaghatta Catchment, baring the small Balyappanahalli Lake. This sole permeable waterbody, unfortunately, is isolated from the interconnected lake system because of the deliberately engineered bypass<\/strong>.<\/big><\/p>

    The inlet stream channel that brings water to the lake is engineered to bypass the lake and connect directly with the stream channel downstream of the lake. Bypass is created to prevent the non-biodegradable undiluted raw wastewater (Industrial effluents, sewage, and disintegrating solid waste), the de-facto 365 days 24\/7 flow in the concretized streambeds,\u00a0 from entering the lake and polluting it. Because of the bypass,\u00a0 the 100-acre lake is useless for harnessing flood waters. Besides, Ulsoor lake\u2019s source of water (or wastewater) is the sewage treatment plant located next to the lake, as depicted in the map. The lake is full of secondary treated wastewater all around the year; thus, there is just no space for flood waters.<\/big><\/p>

    It is a critical mass of these micro-level changes (including the box-type concretization of stormwater drains with flow-hampering sharp straight angle bends)\u00a0 made over a period of time to the drastically altered urban hydrology that exacerbates urban floods in the watershed.\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0<\/big><\/p>

    About Lake Custodianship:<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>

    The lakes in the watershed are under the jurisdiction of different authorities: BBMP, BDA, Zilla Panchayat, Minor Irrigation, and the Horticulture department.<\/big><\/p>

    As per government order (Sept 2016 & Dec 2019), lakes in the BBMP area are under BBMP custody (CAG Report<\/a>). An exception to this: Bellandur and Varthur lakes which are in BDA custody, and the Lal Bagh lake inside Lalbagh Botanical Gardens, is under the horticulture department.<\/big><\/p>

    Then there are \u00a0orphan lakes<\/strong>. Orphan lakes fall in the BBMP jurisdiction but are unacknowledged by BBMP. The majority of the <1 acre lakes are orphaned. Some of the >1 acre lakes, orphaned are below:<\/big><\/p>