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Dhaka’s Struggle with Traffic and Livability.

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Ding, ding, ding. Ding, ding, ding. Honk, honk. Hoooonk. Honk, honk. Toot, toot, toot, ding, ding, ding. Honk, honk, honk.

This is the sound of Dhaka. All. Day. Long. There are only a few hours before dawn when there is quieter hum of traffic. But for the rest of the day, it’s a constant, maddening pummeling to eardrums and interrupts every single thought.

In a matter of a few days, Bangladesh’s capital, a heaving, hot mess of humanity, has become my least favorite place on Earth. It’s the most difficult city I have ever stepped foot in (although Lluís reminds me that I also have little love for Manila and Lima). I’m here because we need to get two necessary stamps in our passports: our Bangladesh extension visa and our visa for India.

But getting anywhere in the city is an exhausting expedition. True to the spirit of our trip, we walk everywhere, not only because we like walking cities, but because in a place like this traffic-logged megacity, it’s faster to walk than to take a bicycle rickshaw, a motorized tuk-tuk (known here as CNGs because they run on compressed natural gas), a bus, a taxi, a moto, or any other wheeled form of transportation.

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There are signs of improvement around Dhaka. Construction of a 4-kilometer flyover (top and middle) is underway and posters (bottom) show the promise of other bypass roads designed to ease traffic. Images: Bangkok Barcelona On Foot
We maneuver around people, makeshift tea stalls, people sleeping on used rice bags under a blanket, vendors hawking everything from coconuts to longyis (the sheets of cloth men typically wear here) and (ironically) bottles of shoe shine, and piles of trash with black birds pecking each other for scraps. We watch people with amputated legs roll themselves sideways along the street not knowing how to help them; we avoid eye contact with an old woman, her spine bent down 90 degrees, begging for a few takas, and we circumnavigate the teenagers who are checking Facebook on their phones while milling around near a shop making fresh roti. We skip over chasms in the sidewalk, and dance around webs of wire and electric cables.

Our most bold move comes when we step off the curb, follow the courageous handful of folks in front of us, and squeeze through vehicular chaos, hoping not to catch the end of the stick the traffic cop swings at the back of a bus to get it to move out of the intersection. We do what locals do—with a confident sense of bravado, we hold our hands out and command the drivers to stop, or at least convince them that we, too, need a sliver of space to pass.

I recently read this New York Times article about the traffic in Dhaka, and couldn’t stop shaking my head in agreement.

Where to go from here?

Dhaka’s the worst, but all of Bangladesh’s cities that we walked through—Chittagong, Comilla, Jessore—have the same problems to some extent, none of which will be easy to fix as more and more people migrate to these densely populated urban centers.

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Parks, shaded with tall, old trees, offer some refuge from Dhaka’s traffic chaos, but need sprucing up. Many people toss their trash wherever they happen to be standing. Photos: Bangkok Barcelona On Foot
Dhaka is already one of the most densely populated places on the planet, passing even Mumbai, according to this Prothom Alo article. Referring to data from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics and the United Nations Population Fund, the article states that Dhaka has the 11th highest population among cities in the world, with 43,500 people living in every square kilometer.

And, it’s only going to intensify. The metropolitan area is home to more than 17 million people, and by 2025 that number could pass 20 million, according to this report from The Independent. Some 300,000 to 400,000 new people migrate to Dhaka every year, the report notes, quoting the World Bank.

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Roads begin to get congested during the morning commute in Dhaka. Traffic and horn honking steadily increase as the day goes on. Photo: Bangkok Barcelona On Foot
Creating a sustainable future

Dhaka’s city officials, urban planners, engineers, architects, businesses and residents have a massive task ahead of them. How will this city absorb this rapid growth and become a livable place for the millions already there and the millions that keep coming?

There are so many places to put the development focus, resources, money, and energy. I don’t envy those charged with the job ahead.

Improving the city’s infrastructure would be an obvious starting point. There is an evident lack of infrastructure ranging from sufficient and adequate housing, to trash picking and disposal to, yes, having enough roads and sidewalks to handle exponential growth.

There are small signs of those things happening. We see a few of them walking around the city—there are a few new high-rise buildings going up, and a four-kilometer flyover road that should alleviate some of the ground traffic.

But doing more than that is a costly ambition, requiring funds that Bangladesh doesn’t have.

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Infrastructure and housing improvements are critical issues as Dhaka’s population swells. Between 300,000 and 400,000 migrate annually to the Dhaka metro area, which is already home to more than 17 million people. Photo: Bangkok Barcelona On Foot
As I sip my sweet milk tea on a hard bench at a small corner tea stall, watching daredevil CNG drivers fight for every centimeter of road, I mull over other options that wouldn’t cost much in comparison, but could make the city a bit easier to live in.

How about organizing communities to pick up trash in the handful of parks we walked by?

How about limiting how much sidewalk space street vendors can use?

How about creating and enforcing a licensing system for the number of CNGs, rickshaws, and buses that circulate the city?

How about not allowing buses to hog up interactions and mill about while touts scour for new passengers?

How about enacting and enforcing a no-honking, no-bell-ringing rule to eliminate the sheer amount of noise pollution being created every second?

Ding, ding, ding. Ding, ding, ding. Honk, honk. Hoooonk. Honk, honk.

My string of thoughts is interrupted. I thank the tea man, and boldly step off the curb into the chaos of one of the world’s most populated places. I hold up my hand to stop traffic, and keep walking onward.

https://www.thenatureofcities.com/2016/12/04/dhakas-dilemma/
 
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But Bangladeshi members think that this is western media's propaganda campaign.
Huh?

Everyone knows Dhaka is one of the most 'unlivable' cities in the world. Traffic is a genuine nightmare. There is no such thing as peak hour...because, it's peak hour all day, every day :lol: But, steps are being taken to try to improve things and there have been some improvements.

Bangladesh as a country should at best have a population of 75 mil, instead it has a population of 175mil. Dhaka ideally should have a population of 5 million, instead it has a population of 20mil. Add to that - the poverty, lack of planned development...it's chaotic.

I'm not sure why anyone would think it was a 'conspiracy' or 'propaganda' to admit this or be angry/upset about it. It is what it is...
 
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But Bangladeshi members think that this is western media's propaganda campaign.
And Kolkata is heading in this direction. Thanks to our liberal nature and Begum Mamata. Earlier it used to be some shitholes like metiaburuz, kiddepore, raja bazar. Though these areas still the filthiest neighbourhoods, the ghetto animals are everywhere now. Their only purpose seem to be spread filth and breed.
 
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I believe after the flyovers, metro rail and BRT services are complete traffic situation in Dhaka will improve greatly. Who knows how long it will take. Gov't should see what can be done to reduce the number of rickshaws. And also put more emphasis on making the city cleaner. It's impossible to oust the vendors from footpaths. They will always come back after several days. This needs to be regulated properly. The people dirtying streets should be fined. Dhaka will never be among the best cities to live but this much needs to be done to make it more liveable and likeable.
 
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Even a spread out, planned, well maintained city like Islamabad is witnessing traffic jams...though in some areas and at some occasions.

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Underneath Moghbazar flyover... on a cloudy rainy day is like a scene of chaos in a batsman movie. XD
 
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Dhaka need s huge fly over , otherwise this prob will not be solved,
 
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But Bangladeshi members think that this is western media's propaganda campaign.

But so does most Indian posters here, Whenever something even minutely negative is posted on India.. They all get massively defensive,Crying blue murder and throwing the the ever proverbial racist card in abandon.. I find Bangladeshi's in comparison are actually more rational

Even a spread out, planned, well maintained city like Islamabad is witnessing traffic jams...though in some areas and at some occasions.

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Lol.. I like how those bikers are taking the detour off road.. :-)
 
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But so does most Indian posters here, Whenever something even minutely negative is posted on India.. They all get massively defensive,Crying blue murder and throwing the the ever proverbial racist card in abando

While there are several cases of anti-Indian bias particularly selection bias in the western (or should I say British) media, I am not aware of any Indian dismissing such a ranking as propaganda.

In fact we take them very seriously & any improvement or decline no matter how marginal is well covered in the Indian media.
 
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Work going on at full tilt for the metro rail project. As usual idiots bitching about the hassles during construction

 
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Op. Ret@rd.

Glad banned.

Nothing new, about Dhaka and its traffic issues. Dhaka is heavily unplanned city, really centralised, and it badly needs certain stuffs out it asap into other parts of the country. Sooner, the gov decentralised things it will be better for Dhaka. As it can't take all the weight on itself. Population is massive and growing for such a un planned mostly part, city.
Thankfully Purbachal will be planned, and one day will be eventually the capital city.
 
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Op. Ret@rd.

Glad banned.

Nothing new, about Dhaka and its traffic issues. Dhaka is heavily unplanned city, really centralised, and it badly needs certain stuffs out it asap into other parts of the country. Sooner, the gov decentralised things it will be better for Dhaka. As it can't take all the weight on itself. Population is massive and growing for such a un planned mostly part, city.
Thankfully Purbachal will be planned, and one day will be eventually the capital city.
Isn't purbachal part of Dhaka?
 
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