Talk
Bangalore Lakes - An Ecological History
By Harini Nagendra
Cities like Bangalore are on a breakneck path to growth, becoming concentrations of pollution, stress, and disease. Episodes of flood and drought demonstrate why we must begin to think ecologically about Bangalore’s lakes, and understand their history, to engage with our collective urban future in Indian cities. Bangalore was built on a firm basis of local ecology, a semi-arid city that created irrigation tanks (now called lakes) from the wetlands in the region, used as commons to foster the growth of settlements and the expansion of the city. Over centuries, as the region became more urbanised, Bangalore ruptured its once close connect to lakes, transforming the ecology of the city and its periphery beyond recognition. This talk will discuss how we need to learn from the ecological history of Bangalore’s lakes, to re-design the city to accommodate its ecology, ensuring human wellbeing as well as resilience to climate change.
Entry free! Register here.
Details
Science Gallery Bengaluru
Bellary Road
Ganga Nagar Layout
Bangalore
560024
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Language: English
Price: Free
Part of series Critical Zones. In Search of a Common Ground. in Bangalore
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