By SUJOY DHAR :
It was only last year that Kolkata’s trams celebrated 150 years of their rollercoaster
journey in the eastern metropolis. For
decades the city’s signature streetcars were
fighting a grim survival battle despite all
ado over heritage.
But the verdict is out- failing miserably to modernise and repurpose it, the West Bengal government has decided to discontinue the service, wiping out with the decision a legacy of the city fast
turning into a relic of its past glory.
However, the route between Esplanade and
Maidan, will remain operational for its tourist
attraction offering a glimpse of the magnificent
Victoria Memorial and the green Maidan park.
Trams have been part of Kolkata's essential
urban landscape since 1873. But the decades of
apathy and inattention despite being a symbol of
the city’s colonial and post colonial heritage dealt
a death blow.
They are still darlings of Bollywood filmmakers
shooting sequences and songs in the Kolkata
streetcars to add layers to their visual contents.
Tinsel town stars would essentially board a tram
and a yellow taxi in Kolkata to promote their
films.
The trams are environment-friendly, but the
streetcars which often fill the air with electric
sparks as they trundle down their tracks have
been abandoned in favour of supposedly faster
transport over the decades.
Their tracks have been pulled out to make way
for more vehicles in the past while metro railway
construction dealt it with further blows.
But trams- the father of all electric vehicles
without exaggeration- is not definitely the darling of the ruling dispensation in Bengal.
It neither was of the previous Left regime when
the neglect started in the absence of any modern
urban planning vision for the crumbling city
now pock-marked with hideous installations and
decorations everywhere set up by the present
regime.
Sagnik Gupta, a filmmaker and member of the
tram lovers group called Calcutta Tram Users
Association (CTUA), in an earlier interview to
IBNS said “there is almost a masterplan to close
the disused tracks (they were suspended for
metro rail work) despite trams being known as
the master of all e-vehicles and despite the city
still having a magnificent network and infrastructure to run trams by revamping the fleet for
modern times.”
“From mass scrapping of heritage wooden bodies, to closing over 20 routes in the past six years,
infrastructure destruction, selling off of big
chunks of depot lands, zero recruitment and frequency coming to two hours from 45 minutes,
the list can go on,” he said.
“Calcutta Tramways played a huge role in the
freedom struggle of India and during the riots of
Bengal.
The Calcutta Tramways also faithfully
served Kolkata by moving its millions on a daily
basis, with over 40 routes and nonstop service
from four in the morning to 11.30 in the night,
Calcutta Tramways was the premier mass transit
system of Kolkata,” he said.
Today the sprawling tram depots are also prone
to the greedy eyes of city’s real estate sharks.
More than public utility, the tram had become
Kolkata’s romanticised street cars for long. They
rumbled through the streets of a choc-a-bloc city
with the signature clanging sound of their bells
and often filling the air with electric sparks while
drawing power from the overhead lines. But even
in that they renewed everyday a covenant
between the city’s present and the past.
They lost the dedicated corridors meant for
them long back as the civic fathers de-reserved
the tram boulevards.
Amid this monumental neglect, the trams tell
the story of the city’s life and times since 1873
when they were first introduced as horse drawn
carriages. Kolkata also till recently boasted of
having the oldest operating electric tram in Asia
running since 1902.
A horse drawn tram system opened in Kolkata
from January 1881 after a premature experiment
in 1873. A steam tramway line opened in 1882.
Electric trams became a reality on March 27,
1902 and by 1921 there were 56 km of track
and 512 cars in service, according to Calcutta
Tramway Company (CTC).
Many of the cars are in ramshackle condition
for a long time though the CTC already has the
infrastructure in place to run the trams, and the
Nonapukur workshop for trams in Kolkata is a
unique factory in itself.
While protests are being held to reverse the
decision, any change of a masterplan to discontinue the environment-friendly mode of transport to save the city's heritage is unlikely.
(Pictures - clockwise from top:
■ Tram lovers urge the citizens to protest to
bring the city’s green mode of transport back
on the streets;
■ The state government miserably failed to
modernise and repurpose trams, a green mode
of transport and a heritage of Kolkata;
■ Mostof thestreetcarsplyinginKolkatawere
shabby and caught in a time warp;
■ A Kolkata tram’s master controller which
the drivers use for acceleration and braking.
■ Tram is part of the city's nostalgia:
■ Heart-broken tram lovers are protesting
■ The signature ceiling fan of a tram)
(Pics: Avishek Mitra)
(IBNS-TWF)