Groundwater sanctuary

The picture at Lalbagh / The Hindu
The picture at Lalbagh / The Hindu

It looks like Basavanagudi is lucky to have a good water table with a lot of open wells capable of providing water to its residents right through the year.

The Indian Institute of World Culture is located in the locality of Basavanagudi, one of the oldest layouts formed in the city in the 1890s. The road on which the building is situated is called the B.P. Wadia Road and is named after the founder of the IIWC, which was established in 1945. There is an excellent library for adults and for children on the rather large campus with the typical old style Bangalore building. Many old timers come to listen to lectures organised in the evenings on various topics. I was there to speak on the culture and tradition of the open well in India.

Since I was early I wandered about the premises speaking to the person looking after the garden and the premises in general. Casually I asked him if there was a well in the area. To my surprise not only did he take me and show me a functioning well but also assured me that the water was crystal clear and sweet.

The well, safely enclosed in a pumping room, dates at least to the 1940s and has been supplying water unfailingly ever since. Devaiah also told me about a large stone lined and stepped open well next to the building which was also there for long. It has now been filled up and a multi-storeyed apartment has come in its place. The apartment has drilled a borewell to supplement its water needs.

Two recharge wells

The Institute has done a nice thing for the well. It has taken all the rooftop rainwater from the two large building blocks on its premises and put it into two recharge wells 10 ft. deep. This ensures that the entire rainwater goes into the aquifer, thus enhancing groundwater levels.

In front of the Institute is the famous M.N. Krishna Rao Park. Here also is a water reservoir of the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB). This reservoir is filled daily from waters of the Cauvery a 100 km. away and 300 metres below the city. Ironically it also probably sits on a shallow aquifer with a high groundwater table that it ignores.

The area now known as Gandhi Bazaar was built upon a tank called Karanji Tank. This is close to the Institute. On the other end, not far away, is the Lalbagh Lake. Hyder Ali began the famous Lalbagh gardens with three wells for irrigation, says the traveller and chronicler Buchanan. It looks like Basavanagudi is lucky to have a good water table with a lot of open wells capable of providing water to its residents right through the year.

It only remains that we remember the well as a source of good and cheap water, that we protect and preserve the catchment so as not to pollute the resource and that we enhance it through rainwater harvesting measures. Areas such as these should be designated as groundwater sanctuaries and the groundwater legislation used to sustainably maintain that most precious of all resources for this city — water.

As a famous writer once said, this is a fight between memory and forgetfulness. The memory of the well must be retained and must be integrated with modern water needs but in ecological fashion.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> Habitat / by S. Vishwanath / August 08th, 2014

Leave a Reply