Silted Sukhna Lake to breathe again
April 30th, 2010 - 11:17 am ICT by IANSBy Jaideep Sarin
Chandigarh, April 30 (IANS) The hugely popular Sukhna lake, faced with a major threat of siltation, is set to regain its vast water expanse - thanks to some frantic digging by the authorities to clear up mounds of silt.
The lake, which has the picturesque Kasauli hills of the lower Himalayas in the backdrop, was conceived by architect Le Corbusier and his team who planned Chandigarh in 1958.
The deterioration of the lake over the years has caused much concern. The Punjab and Haryana High Court this week directed the union territory authorities to clear up the lake.
With the court watching the operations closely, the administration is trying to get the silt removed before the onset of the monsoon season - June-end. The authorities have now raised the target of silt removal to 80 lakh cubic feet from 50 lakh cubic feet.
However, a fresh area of the lake’s silted bed - about 15-20 acres - is beginning to show up over the receding water level. The new underbelly of the Sukhna Lake signifies that nearly half of the man-made lake’s original size is now a dry bed.
The city’s engineering department this month mounted the biggest exercise to remove the silt - using heavy machinery and equipment. Nearly 10 lakh cubic feet of silt has already been removed.
“We have pressed heavy machinery and several trucks and tractor-trolleys for silt removal. We hope to achieve our target before the monsoon sets in,” Chandigarh’s engineering secretary Sanjay Kumar said.
Only 7.75 lakh cubic feet of silt was removed in 2009. In 2008 and 2007, the silt removed was a mere 2.14 lakh cubic feet and 0.67 lakh cubic feet.
Sukhna Lake, the most popular tourist spot in the city along with the Rock Garden, was built by making a 3-km long dam on the Sukhna Choe (seasonal rivulet). It was conceived as a place of relaxation, seclusion and sport by the city’s founder architect Le Corbusier and his team.
The lake faced unchecked siltation for over three decades from its catchment area, reducing its water storage capacity by nearly half, before authorities woke up to the problem. Efforts to de-silt the lake in the next two decades, including voluntary service (shramdaan) failed to bring any substantive results.
The forest and wildlife department has built 192 silt-retention dams and 200 check dams in the catchment area to prevent silt from flowing into the lake bed.
This helped cut down the inflow of silt into the lake - from 140 tonnes to five tonnes per hectare per year. However, by the time the silt inflow was checked, over 70 acres of the lake’s bed was lost permanently to silt - which the authorities are now trying to reclaim.
The lake is frequented by scores of morning and evening walkers every day, besides hundreds of tourists and other visitors.
“We have seen gradual deterioration of the lake. It is good that the administration is finally doing something about the silt because no one seemed bothered about it for the last 3-4 decades,” morning walker A.K. Bhatia told IANS.
The authorities have planned a Garden of Silence as an added attraction and a tourist information centre for visitors at the lake.
Boating is a very popular activity with tourists, with over 100 paddle and rowing boats and five shikaras or house boats, being booked daily.
(Jaideep Sarin can be contacted at jaideep.s@ians.in)
- As Chandigarh grows, its famous Sukhna Lake shrinks - Feb 18, 2010
- Chandigarh to spruce up Sukhna Lake to attract tourists - Jan 31, 2011
- Rowing prospects mired in Sukhna's silt and weeds - Jul 18, 2010
- Rainwater harvesting works wonders for Sukhna Lake - Jan 11, 2011
- Chandigarh is high on rainwater harvesting - Mar 03, 2010
- Students out on boats to save Sukhna lake - May 15, 2010
- Sukhna Lake's silting brought under control: Official - Nov 26, 2009
- Nepal's strong Chandigarh connections - Aug 30, 2011
- Chandigarh to shine bright at night (With image) - Jul 31, 2011
- Chandigarh's Sukhna Lake gets souvenir shop - Feb 15, 2011
- More foreign tourists flocking to Chandigarh - Feb 28, 2010
- Jaspal Bhatti sets up factory for foundation stones! - Nov 29, 2011
- Chandigarh to conduct its first-ever wildlife census - Dec 08, 2010
- Flood gates opened at Himachal's Pong Dam - Aug 18, 2011
- Punjab cautions against possibility of floods - Aug 17, 2011
Tags: architect le corbusier, cubic feet, decad, engineering department, heavy machinery, lakh, le corbusier, long dam, monsoon season, punjab and haryana high court, rivulet, s engineering, sanjay kumar, sarin, seclusion, siltation, target, territory authorities, tourist spot, union territory