Ahmedabad ( , Hindi: अहमदाबाद ) is a city in India
; it is the
largest city in the state of Gujarat
, with a
population of approximately 52 lakhs
(5.2 million). Located on the banks of the River Sabarmati
, the city is the administrative centre of Ahmedabad district and was the capital of Gujarat from 1960 to 1970;
the capital was shifted to Gandhinagar
thenafter. In colloquial Gujarati, it is
commonly called Amdavad.
Ahmedabad was founded in 1411 by
Sultan Ahmed Shah to serve as the
capital of the
Gujarat Sultanate.
The city is named after its founder. Under
British rule, a military
cantonment was established and the city
infrastructure was modernised and expanded. Although incorporated
into the
Bombay Presidency during
the British rule in India, Ahmedabad remained the most important
city in the Gujarat region.
The city established itself as the home of a
booming textile industry, which earned it the nickname "the
Manchester
of the East." The city was at the forefront
of the
Indian independence
movement in the first half of the 20th century. It was the
centre of many campaigns of
civil
disobedience to promote workers' rights,
civil rights and political independence.
With the
creation of the state
of Gujarat in 1960, Ahmedabad gained prominence as commercial
capital of the state. The city is witnessing a major construction
boom and population increase. A rising centre of education,
information technology and
scientific industries, Ahmedabad remains the
cultural and
commercial heart of Gujarat and much of
western India.
History

Map of Ahmedabad, depicted in a
miniature style painting on a cloth, circa 19th century
evidence suggests that the area around Ahmedabad has been inhabited
since the 11th century, when it was known as
Ashapalli or
Ashaval.
At that time, Karandev I, the Solanki
ruler of Anhilwara (modern Patan
), waged a
successful war against the Bhil king of
Ashaval, and established a city called Karnavati located
at the present time area of Maninagar close to the river
Sabarmati. Solanki rule lasted until the 13th century,
when Gujarat came under the control of the Vaghela dynasty of Dholka
and
Karnavati was conquered by the Sultanate of Delhi. In 1411, the
rule of the
Muzaffarid dynasty
was established in Gujarat. According to legend, Sultan
Ahmed Shah, while camping on the banks
of the River Sabarmati, saw a hare chasing a dog. Impressed by this
act of bravery, the Sultan, who had been looking for a place to
build his new capital, decided to locate the capital at this forest
area close by to Karnavati right on the river bank and christened
it Ahmedabad.. The incident is popularly described in a one liner
saying "Jab kutte pe sassa aaya, tab Badshah ne shaher basaya".
When the hare chased the dog, seeing that act of bravery then the
Emperor built the City.
In 1487,
Mahmud Begada, the grandson
of Ahmed Shah,
fortified the city with
an outer wall 10 km (6 miles) in circumference and
consisting of
twelve gates, 189
bastions and over 6,000
battlements. Ahmedabad was ruled by the
Muzaffarid dynasty until 1573 when Gujarat was conquered by the
Mughal emperor
Akbar. During the Mughal reign, Ahmedabad became one
of the Empire's thriving centres of trade, mainly in
textiles, which were exported to as far as Europe.
The Mughal ruler
Shahjahan spent the prime
of his life in the city, sponsoring the construction of the
Moti Shahi Mahal in
Shahibaug. During a drought, the
Deccan Famine of 1630-32 affected
the city, as did famines in 1650 and 1686. Ahmedabad remained the
provincial headquarter of the Mughals until 1758, when Mughals
surrendered the city to the
Marathas.
During
Maratha governance, the city lost some of its past glory, and was
at the center of contention between two Maratha clans—The Peshwa of Poona and the Gaekwad of Baroda
. The
British East India
Company took over the city in 1818 as a part of the conquest of
India. A military cantonment was established in 1824 and a
municipal government in 1858.
In 1864, a railway link between Ahmedabad and
Mumbai
(then Bombay) was established by the Bombay, Baroda, and
Central India Railway (BB&CI), making Ahmedabad an
important junction in the traffic and trade between northern and southern
India. Large numbers of people migrated from rural areas
to work in textile mills, establishing a robust industry.
The
Indian independence
movement developed strong roots in the city when, in 1915,
Mahatma Gandhi established two
ashrams — the Kochrab Ashram near Paldi in 1915 and the Satyagraha Ashram (now Sabarmati
Ashram
) on the banks of the Sabarmati in 1917 — that would
become centers of intense nationalist activities. During the
mass protests against the
Rowlatt Act in 1919, textile workers
burned down 51 government buildings across the city in protest at a
British attempt to extend wartime regulations after the
First World War. In the 1920s, textile workers
and teachers went on strike, demanding civil rights and better pay
and working conditions. In 1930, Gandhi initiated the
Salt Satyagraha from Ahmedabad by embarking
from his ashram on the famous
Dandi
Salt March. The city administration and economic institutions
were rendered functionless by the large masses of people who took
to the streets in peaceful protests in the early 1930s, and again
in 1942 during the
Quit India
movement. Following independence and the
partition of India in 1947, the city was
scarred by intense communal violence that broke out between
Hindus and
Muslims.
Ahmedabad became the capital of the new state of Gujarat after the
bifurcation of the
State of Bombay on 1
May 1960. During that period, a large number of educational and
research institutions were founded in the city, making it a major
center of
higher education,
science and technology. Ahmedabad's economic base was diversified
with the establishment of
heavy and
chemical industries in its
vicinity around the same period. But the growth in the next two
decades was punctuated by political events in and around the city.
In 1974, Ahmedabad occupied the centre stage in national politics
with the launch of the
Nav
Nirman agitation — a protest against a 20% hike in the
hostel food fees at the
L.D. College of Engineering that
snowballed into a mass agitation against general corruption to
remove
Chimanbhai Patel, then-chief
minister of Gujarat. In the 1980s, a
reservation policy was introduced in
the country, which led to anti-reservation protests in 1981 and
1985. The protests witnessed violent clashes between people
belonging to various
castes.
On 26 January 2001 a devastating earthquake
struck the city, centred near Bhuj
, measuring
6.9 on the Richter
scale. As many as 50 multistory buildings collapsed,
killing 752 people and devastating the city's infrastructure. The
following year,
communal riots
between Hindus and Muslims spread to Ahmedabad, paralysing the city
for more than a month. The crisis resulted in the deaths of an
estimated 1,044 people across the state. The displacement of
thousands of Muslims led to the erection of refugee camps around
the city. On 26 July 2008 a
series of seventeen bomb blasts
rocked the city, killing and injuring several people.
In recent years, the effects of liberalization of the Indian
economy has energized the city's economy towards tertiary sector
activities like
commerce,
communication,
construction activities. The city has
witnessed the establishment of scientific and service industries,
the expansion of the
information
technology sector, and significant improvements in
transportation and communications. Ahmedabad's population is
growing, which has resulted in a construction and housing
boom.
Geography and climate
Geography

River Sabarmati

Vastrapur Lake
Ahmedabad is located at in western India at an elevation of
53 metres (174 ft).
The city sits on the banks of the River
Sabarmati
, in north-central Gujarat. It spans an area
of 205 km² (79.15 square miles). The Sabarmati frequently
dries up in the summer, leaving only a small stream of water. The
city is located in a sandy and dry area. Many of the localities and
roads are often spread in sand, reflecting the intensifying fallout
caused by
deforestation.
The steady expansion
of the Rann of
Kutch
threatens to increase desertification around the city area and
much of the state. Except for the small hills of
Thaltej-Jodhpur Tekra, the city is
almost flat.
Two lakes are within the city's limits —
Kankaria
Lake
and Vastrapur Lake
. Kankaria lake, in the neighbourhood of
Maninagar, is an artificial lake developed
by the Sultan of Delhi,
Qutb-ud-din
Aybak, in 1451. According to the
Bureau of Indian Standards, the
town falls under
seismic zone-III, in a
scale of I to V (in order of increasing proneness to
earthquakes)
Ahmedabad is divided by the Sabarmati into two physically distinct
eastern and western regions. The eastern bank of the river houses
the old city, which includes the central town of
Bhadra. This part of Ahmedabad is characterised by
packed bazaars, the clustered and barricaded
pol system of close clustered buildings,
and numerous places of worship. It houses the main railway station,
the
General Post Office, and few
buildings of the Muzaffarid and British eras. The colonial period
saw the expansion of the city to the western side of Sabarmati,
facilitated by the construction of
Ellis
Bridge in 1875 and later with the modern
Nehru Bridge. This part of the city houses
educational institutions, modern buildings, well-planned
residential areas, shopping malls, multiplexes and new business
districts centred around roads Such as
AshramRoad,
C.G.Road
&
Sarkhej-Gandhinagar
Highway.
Climate
Under the
Koppen climate
classification, Ahmedabad has a
tropical savanna climate. There are
three main seasons: summer,
monsoon and
winter. Aside from the monsoon season, the climate is dry. The
weather is hot through the months of March to June — the average
summer maximum is 45
°C
(97
°F), and the average minimum is
23 °C (73 °F). From November to February, the average
maximum temperature is 30 °C (85 °F), the average minimum
is 15 °C (59 °F), and the climate is extremely dry. Cold
northerly winds are responsible for a mild chill in January. The
southwest monsoon brings a humid climate from mid-June to
mid-September. The average rainfall is 93.2 cm
(36.7 inches), but infrequent heavy torrential rains cause the
river to
flood. The highest temperature
recorded is 47 °C (116.6 °F) and the lowest is 5 °C
(41 °F). In recent years, Ahmedabad has suffered from
increasing air, water and soil pollution from neighbouring
industrial areas and textile mills.
Civic administration
Ahmedabad is administered by the
Ahmedabad Municipal
Corporation (AMC). Some of the regions surrounding the city are
administered by the
Ahmedabad Urban
Development Authority (AUDA). The AMC was established in July
1950 under the
Bombay Provincial Corporation Act, 1949.
For administrative purposes, the city is divided into 43 wards..
Citizens elect
corporators during civic
elections. At present the corporation consists of 129 corporators
elected from 43 wards. These 129 corporators elect a mayor and
deputy mayor for a turn of two and a half years. Executive powers
are vested in the municipal commissioner, who is an
IAS officer appointed by the
Gujarat state government. The mayor is responsible for the
day-to-day running of the municipal school board, the city bus
service, the municipal hospital, and the city library. The city
serves as the headquarters of Ahmedabad district and as the seat of
the
Gujarat High Court. The
Ahmedabad city police are headed by a
Police Commissioner, an
Indian Police Service officer.
Ahmedabad's
Kamla Nehru
Zoological Park features
endangered species like
flamingoes,
caracal,
Asiatic wolf,
chinkara
and many more. AMC has initiated the
Sabarmati Riverfront
Development Project with an of objective environmental
improvement with provision of slum rehabilitation for poor living
on the river banks. Ahmedabad boasts of some of the largest number
of hospitals in the country - both government and private. The
Ahmedabad civil hospital is
the largest hospital in Asia. The
healthcare in Ahmedabad is one of
the best in India.
Electricity in the city is provided by
Torrent Power group, previously a state-run
corporation. The city elects two members to the
Lok Sabha and seven to the Gujarat
Vidhan Sabha. Two main political parties have
won a significant number of seats in
elections — the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the
Indian National Congress
(INC). Of the thirteen assembly seats of Ahmedabad, ten were won by
the BJP and three by the Congress Party during the legislative
elections in 2007. In the 2005 Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation
elections, the BJP won 96 seats, 32 seats went to the Congress, and
one seat went to an independent candidate.
Economy

Modern Office Building

A mall in Ahmedabad.
Retail Industry is one of the largest employers in the
city
In the 19th century, the textile and garments industry received
strong capital investment. On 30 May 1861
Ranchhodlal Chhotalal founded the
first Indian textile mill, the
Ahmedabad
Spinning and Weaving Company Limited. This was followed by the
establishment of a series of textile mills such as the
Calico Mills,
Bagicha Mills and
Arvind Mills. By
1905 there were about 33 textile mills in the city. The textile
industry further expanded rapidly during the
First World War, and benefited from the
influence of Mahatma Gandhi's
Swadeshi
movement, which promoted the purchase of Indian-made goods.
Ahmedabad was known as the "Manchester of the East", for its
largely expanding realms of the textile industry.
Ahmedabad has a thriving chemicals and
pharmaceuticals industry. Two of the
biggest pharmaceutical companies of India —
Zydus Cadila and
Torrent Pharmaceuticals — are based
in the city. The city serves as the corporate headquarters of the
Adani Group, which is a leading
multinational trading and infrastructure development company. The
Nirma group of industries, which runs a large
number of detergent and chemical industrial units, has its
corporate headquarters in the city. In recent year many foreign
companies have set up their sales offices and production facilities
in Ahmedabad. Amongst them are
Bosch
Rexroth, Germany (hydraulic components);
Stork, Netherlands (textile machinery; joint
venture with ATE, India's leading textile equipment trading house);
Rollepaal, Netherlands (pipe extrusion
equipment); and Johnson Pumps, Sweden.
The
completion and operation of the Sardar Sarovar Project
of dams and canals has improved the supply of
potable water and electricity for the city. In recent years,
the Gujarat government has increased investment in the
modernisation of the city's infrastructure, providing for the
construction of larger roads and improvements to water supply,
electricity and communications. The
information technology industry has
developed significantly in Ahmedabad. A
NASSCOM survey in 2002 on the "Super Nine Indian
Destinations" for IT-enabled services ranked Ahmedabad fifth among
the top nine most competitive cities in the country. City is the
largest supplier of
denim and one of the
largest exporters of
gems and
jewelery in India.
A diverse labour force of migrant workers from different parts of
Gujarat and neighbouring states is integral to the economy of the
city. These workers provide vital household labour and services for
the city's large middle class. Ahmedabad plays a strong and
significant role in providing commercial resources and market
access for the economies of neighbouring cities. A majority of the
working-age citizens of Ahmedabad are traders and business people.
This has led to the creation of major mercantile corporations and
artisan guilds that are a key
influence on the economic life of Gujarat. The city's educational
and industrial institutions have attracted students and young
skilled workers from the rest of India.
Demographics
As per the 2001 Indian
census, the area
under Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation has a population of
3,520,085. The population of the Ahmedabad urban agglomeration
(which includes the region governed by AUDA) was 4,525,013. The
urban agglomeration accounts for 21.7% of Gujarat's urban
population.
Ahmedabad has a literacy rate of 79.89%, which is the
Second highest in Gujarat After Gandhinagar
With 87.11%; 87.81% males and 71.12% females are
literate. According to the census for the
Ninth Plan, there are 30,737 rural
families living in Ahmedabad. Of those, 5.41% (1663 families) live
below the poverty line.
Approximately 440,000 people live in
slums
within the city. Ahmedabad is home to a large population of
Vanias (i.e., traders), belonging to the
Vaishnava sect of Hinduism and the sects
of
Jainism. Most of the residents of
Ahmedabad are native
Gujaratis.
Although Gujarati is spoken,
Hindi is very
commonly spoken, especially in commerce, education, politics,
government, shops, and road signs. According to
National Crime Records Bureau
(NCRB) report of 2003, Ahmedabad ranks 12th in the list of 35
Indian cities with a population of more than 10 lakh in the crime
rate ratio. City's main jail is
Sabarmati Central Jail.
Since its
founding, the city has attracted migrant workers from other areas
of Gujarat, including Kutch and
Saurashtra
, and from the neighbouring states of Rajasthan
and Maharashtra
as well as the Pakistani
province of Sindh
.
There is a sizeable population of
Punjabis,
Marathis,
Telugu,
Tamils,
Sindhis,
Malayalis and
Marwaris, who
bring their native language and culture to the city. The city is
home to some 2000
Parsis and some 300
members of
Bene Israel Jews
community.There are 2273 registered
NRI's from Ahmedabad.Slightly less than
half of all real estate in Ahmedabad is owned by "community
organizations" (i.e. cooperatives), and "the spatial growth of the
city is to the extent contribution of these organizations."
Ahmedabad
Cantonment
also provides residential zones for Indian Army officials.
Culture

Jumma Masjid, Ahmedabad
Ahmedabad enjoys a thriving cultural tradition, being the centre of
Gujarati cultural activities and diverse traditions of different
ethnic and religious communities. Popular celebrations and
observances include
Uttarayan — an annual
kite-flying day on 14 January. The nine nights
of
Navratri are celebrated with people
performing
Garba — the folk dance of
Gujarat — at venues across the city. The festival of lights —
Deepavali is celebrated with the lighting of
lamps in every house, the decorating the floors with the
rangoli and the bursting of firecrackers. Other
festivals such as
Holi,
Eid ul-Fitr and
Christmas are celebrated with enthusiasm. The
annual
Rath Yatra procession on the
Ashadh-sud-bij date of the
Hindu
calendar and the procession of
Tajia during the Muslim
holy month of
Muharram are integral parts
of the city's culture.
The people of Ahmedabad enjoy rich
culinary traditions. The most popular form of
meal — a typical Gujarati
thali (meal) — consists of
rotli,
dal, rice and
Shaak (cooked vegetables, sometimes with
curry), with accompaniments of pickles and roasted
papads. Popular beverages include
buttermilk and tea; sweet dishes include
laddoos and
mango. There are many restaurants, which serve a wide
array of Indian and international cuisines. Most of the food
outlets serve only vegetarian food, as a strong tradition of
vegetarianism is maintained by the
city's Jain and Hindu communities. The first all-vegetarian
Pizza Hut in the world opened in
Ahmedabad.
The
architectural history of
Ahmedabad stretches across the last millennium. The Sultanate fused
Hindu craftsmanship with
Islamic
architecture, giving rise to the
Indo-Saracenic style. Many
mosques in the city are built in this fashion.After
independence modern buildings came up in Ahmedabad when renowned
architects were given commissions in the city like
Louis Kahn who designed the Indian Institute of
Management;
Le Corbusier who designed
the Shodhan and Sarabhai Villas, the Sanskar Kendra and the Mill
Owner's Association; and
Buckminister Fuller who designed the
Calico Dome.
B. V. Doshi came to the
city from Paris to supervise
Le
Corbusier's works and later set up the School of Architecture.
His local masterpieces include Sangath, the Doshi-Hussain Gufa and
the School of Architecture.
Charles
Correa, who became a partner of Doshi's, designed the Gandhi
Ashram and
Achut Kanvinde the Indian
Textile Industries Research Association.
Christopher Charles
Benninger's first work, the Alliance Francaise, is located in
the Ellis Bridge area. Hasmukh C. Patel, and his son Dr. Bimal
Patel, are renowned architects of the city having designed the
St. Xavier's High
School Loyola Hall, Gujarat High Court and the
Ahmedabad Management
Association. Anant Raje recently designed a major addition to
Louis Kahn's campus, the Indian Institute of Management.
Parts of Ahmedabad are known for their speciality of folk art.
The Paldi
area is famous for shops selling works of embroidery from the
Kutch and Saurashtra
regions. The artisans of Rangeela
pol are famous for making
bandhinis
(tie and dye work), while the cobbler shops of Madhupura sell
traditional
mojri footwear. High-quality idols of
Ganesha and other religious icons are made in huge
numbers in the Gulbai Tekra area. The shops at the
Law Garden are famous for their mirror work
handicraft.
Victorian
architecture is showcased in most college, railway station and
government buildings, mainly constructed during the colonial
period.
Many Gujarati intellectuals migrated to Ahmedabad due to its
prosperity. Three main literary institutions were established in
Ahmedabad for the promotion of
Gujarati literature —
Gujarat Vidhya Sabha,
Gujarati Sahitya Parishad and
Gujarat Sahitya Sabha.
Musicians and instrumentalists from across the world come to
perform at the popular classical music festival held each 1 January
by the
Saptak School of
Music.
The Sanskar Kendra
— one of the many buildings in Ahmedabad designed
by Le Corbusier — is a city museum
depicting history, art, culture and architecture of
Ahmedabad. The
Gandhi
Smarak Sangrahalaya and the
Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel National Memorial have a permanent display of
photographs, documents and other articles of Mahatma Gandhi and
Sardar Patel. The
Calico Museum of Textiles has a
large collection of Indian and international fabrics, garments and
textiles. Ahmedabad maintains a strong popular literary tradition
in large public libraries maintained by the literary societies,
research and government institutions and colleges. The
Hazrat Pir Mohammad Shah
Library has a collection of rare original manuscripts in
Arabic,
Persian,
Urdu,
Sindhi and
Turkish languages.
Sports
Cricket is the most popular sport in the
city.
Sardar Patel Stadium
, built in 1982, hosts both one-day international and test matches. The stadium also hosted
the
1996 Cricket World Cup.
Ahmedabad also has a second cricket stadium at the Ahmedabad
Municipal Corporation's
Sports
Club of Gujarat which is the home ground of the
Gujarat cricket team that plays in
domestic tournament of
Ranji Trophy.
City is represented by
Ahmedabad
Rockets in
Indian Cricket
League which is played in
Twenty20
format of the game. Other sports gaining popularity are
field hockey,
badminton,
tennis, and
squash. Ahmedabad currently has three
golf courses.
Mithakhali Multi Sports
Complex is being developed by the AMC to promote various indoor
sports. There has been a significant increase in recent years in
the number of private sports clubs,
gymkhanas, gymnasia and sports teams sponsored by
corporations, private associations, schools and colleges. Young
people congregate in the evenings to play cricket and football at
numerous public and neighbourhood grounds. Recently Ahmedabad
hosted national level games for
roller
skating and
Table Tennis.
Kart racing is fast gaining popularity in the
city, with facility of 380 meter long track based on
Formula One concept. In 2007, Ahmedabad hosted
the 51st national level
shooting
games.
Geet Sethi, a five-time winner of
the
World
Professional Billiards Championship and a recipient of India's
highest sporting award, the
Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, hails from
Ahmedabad. Ahmedabad has produced cricketers such as
Jasu Patel and
Parthiv
Patel who have been members of the
Indian cricket team.
Tejas Bakre, a
chess grandmaster, is from Ahmedabad.
Soccer has also become a very popular sport in Ahmedabad. Gujarat's
best goalkeeper Anukal Yana is from Ahmedabad and Gujarat's best
midfielder Rajesh Tadvi is also from Ahmedabad.
Transport

International Airport

Ahmedabad bus

Ahmedabad BRTS
Air
The
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International
Airport
serves both domestic and international flights to
and from Ahmedabad and the neighboring cities of Surendranagar,
Mehsana
and Nadiad
. The
airport connects the city with destinations across India and the
world.
Rail
Ahmedabad is one of the six operating divisions of the
Western Railway. Railway lines
connect the city to all towns in Gujarat and other major Indian
cities.
The Ahmedabad Railway Station
also locally known as Kalupur Railway Station is
the city's main terminus; Ahmedabad's fifteen other stations are
Maninagar, Vatva,
Gandhigram, Asarva, Chandlodia, Kali gam, Vastrapur, Sabarmati,
Sarkhej, Naroda, Aamli.
The state
government has registered Metro link Express for Gandhinagar
and Ahmedabad Company Ltd as a special purpose
vehicle (SPV) for the metro rail project for Ahmedabad and Gandhinagar
. The state government plans to use this SPV
as a nodal agency to implement the metro and regional rail project
based on public-private partnership for Ahmedabad Region and
Gandhinagar
Cosmopolitan Region.
Road
National Highway 8, linking
Delhi
to Mumbai
, passes
though Ahmedabad. It connects Gandhinagar
, Delhi
and Mumbai
.
From The
National Highway 8c Ahmedabad is linked to Gandhinagar
. Ahmedabad is connected to Vadodara
through National Expressway 1, a
94 km (58 mi) long highway with only two exits.
This expressway is part of the
Golden Quadrilateral project..
The city's main traffic arteries are the Mahatma Gandhi Road,
C. G. Road, the Jawaharlal Nehru Road,
Ashram Road. The
Sarkhej-Gandhinagar Highway is
known as Ahmedabad's growth symbol. Transportation For Gandhinagar
is available for 24 hours from SG highway.
Auto rickshaws,
share autos and buses are the most
popular forms of public transport. The
Ahmedabad Municipal
Transport Service (AMTS) runs the local bus service in the
city. In 2005, AMTS began a drive to convert all of its petrol and
diesel engine buses to run on
compressed natural gas engines to
reduce the effects of air pollution. AMTS runs 750 buses. Bicycles
and motorcycles are a popular medium of transport with the city's
young people and students. The
Ahmedabad
BRTS project has been launched by the
Government of Gujarat. The project's
first phase is projected to be completed by May 2009.
In 2001, Ahmedabad was ranked as the 1st most polluted city in
India, out of 85 cities, by the Central Pollution Control Board.
The
Gujarat Pollution
Control Board gave auto rickshaw drivers an incentive of Rs.
10,000 to convert all 37,733 auto rickshaws in Ahmedabad to cleaner
burning
compressed natural
gas to reduce pollution. As a result, in 2008, Ahmedabad was
ranked 50th most polluted city in India.
Ahmedabad Municipal Corpaoration has recently started a new
transport system called BRTS (Bus Rapid Transit System). First
phase of the project is over and it has already started. First
phase include the placed between Ranip Cross Roads to Vasna. The
buses are comfortable and technically advanced. They have separate
lanes in which no other vehicles are allowed. Remaining phases are
about to be completed and they will be operational by mid
2010.
Urban Initiative
Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation has established the Sabarmati
River-Front Development Corporation Limited (SRFDCL) for planned
development of both bank of Sabarmati River that passes thru
Ahmedabad. Under this initiative, SRFDCL plans to develop seven new
public gardens; wide public promenades along the entire length of
the river with adequate on-street parking facilities; allocation of
serviced land for relocation of hundreds of households affected by
the project; development of four-lane wide roads along the entire
length on both the banks, to name a few. This initiative has a huge
support of the Gujarat state government. Ahmedabad Municipal
Corporation has also developed historic Kankaria Lake and modern
Vastrapur Lake.
The state government is developing Ahmedabad
and Mahesana
- The Judicial Capital of North Gujarat. As
Twin-Cities and to facilitate that process in the North-West
portion of Gujarat State.
Education

The Gujarat University clock tower in
Ahmedabad

Louis Kahn Plaza, Indian Institute of
Management Ahmedabad
Schools in Ahmedabad are run either by the municipal corporation,
or privately by entities, trusts and corporations. Most schools are
affiliated with the
Gujarat
Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board. A few schools
are affiliated to the
Central Board for
Secondary Education,
Council
for the Indian School Certificate Examinations,
International Baccalaureate and
National Institute
of Open School. A large number of colleges in the city are
affiliated with
Gujarat
University. Other
deemed
universities in Ahmedabad include the
Nirma University of
Science & Technology and the
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar
Open University. The
Gujarat
Vidyapith was established in 1920 by
Mahatma Gandhi without a charter from the
British Raj and became a
deemed university in 1963.
Other institutions
such as the Indian Institute of
Management
, the National Institute of Design,
the Mudra
Institute of Communications, the Entrepreneurship
Development Institute of India, B.J. Medical College, NHL Municipal Medical
College and the
Center for
Environmental Planning and Technology are located in Ahmedabad.
Many national academic and scientific institutions, such as the
Physical Research
Laboratory, the
Indian Space Research
Organisation, were established in the 1960s largely through the
efforts of prominent astrophysicist and industrialist
Vikram Sarabhai. The
Ahmedabad Management
Association is a notable institution established to impart
management training and experience to young students and
professionals. The campus was opened with a plan to offer 100
courses in various technical disciplines.
The National Institute of Design (NID) is internationally acclaimed
as one of the foremost multi-disciplinary institutions in the field
of design education and research.
NID has been a pioneer in industrial
design education after Bauhaus and Ulm in Germany and is known for
its pursuit of design excellence to make Designed in India, the
Indian Institute of Management
Ahmedabad
(also known as IIMA), was ranked as the top
business school in India according to the Business Today.
B-School Rankings in 2007-08 and the ET B-school Survey 2007. It is
widely considered to be also one of the toughest MBA programmes in
the world to gain admission to as over 200,000 people apply each
year for the entrance exam to get into roughly 250 places.
Media

Broadcasting tower of the All India
Radio, Ahmedabad
Newspapers in Ahmedabad include Hindi dailies as
Herald Young
Leader,
Metro Herald, and English dailies such as
The Times of India,
Indian Express,
DNA,
The Economic Times and
The Financial Express. Newspapers
in vernacular languages (Gujarati and Hindi) include
Divya Bhaskar,
Gujarat Samachar,
Sandesh,
Rajasthan Patrika and
Metro . A large number of magazines,
periodicals and journals are published from Ahmedabad. The city is
home to the historic
Navajivan
Publishing House — founded in 1919 by Mahatma Gandhi. The
Gujarat
film and
television industry has a small but
significant presence in the city.
The state-owned
All India Radio is
broadcast both on the
Medium Wave and
FM bands in the city. It
competes with six private local
FM stations —
Radio Mirchi (98.3
MHz),
Radio City
(91.1 MHz), My fm (94.3 MHz),
Radio One (95.0 MHz), Gyan Vaani
(104.5 MHz) and
S FM (93.51 MHz).
Satellite radio was launched in the
city by
WorldSpace in 2005. The
state-owned television broadcaster
Doordarshan provides free terrestrial channels,
while two
multi system
operator —
InCablenet and
Siti Cable — provide a mix of Gujarati, Hindi,
English and other regional channels via
cable.
Direct broadcast satellite is yet
to gain popularity in Ahmedabad. A network of
optical fibre cables connects almost the
entire city.
The city's telephone services are provided
by landline and mobile operators such as BSNL
, Reliance CDMA
& Reliance GSM, Airtel,
Vodafone, Idea and
Tata Indicom. Broadband Internet services are provided
in most parts of the city by the telecom companies.
Sister Cities
References
Further reading
- Muktirajsinhji Chauhan and Kamalika Bose. History of
Interior Design in India Vol 1 : Ahmedabad (2007) ISBN
8190409603
External links