WEDNESDAY, April 24, 2024
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Blueprint ‘50% complete’ despite objections

Blueprint ‘50% complete’ despite objections

THE blueprint for the “Chao Phraya for All” riverside promenade mega-project is 50 per cent finished and should be complete by the September deadline, according to a team from King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Lat Krabang (KMITL).

The KMITL-hosted press conference yesterday got a bit heated when a leader of the “Friends of the River” group Yossapon Boonsom asked whose duty it was to conduct a feasibility study and said the institution should first launch a formal debate on the subject. 
The project spokesperson Antika Sawadsri said the study on the project was nearly 70 per cent complete, while the blueprint for phase one of the 14-kilometre promenade was 50 per cent finished. 
The team was given seven months to complete the study and has two months left before the September deadline. Once the study is ready, the project will be up for bidding in October, and construction should begin in January 2017. 
“For now many of the construction plans are still not settled because they go past sensitive areas such as royal pavilions. It is also difficult to design a promenade in a community area because community members are always ready to offer their opinions,” she said. 
She said the next step would be to finalise the blueprint and then arrange a final public hearing in early September to hear people’s opinions on the project, adding that the job would be done in time. 
“Many plans are not approved yet, so it is not the time to publicise it right. This is why some communities have been complaining that we have not provided them with full information and that we only advertised the project,” she said. 
“We still have the problem of acceptance, because some people don’t want the promenade passing through their communities, so the solution may be that the promenade will be built jutting into the river instead,” the spokesperson said. 
At the end of the session, Yossapon asked why the team did not conduct a feasibility study, how it would take responsibility for its findings, and whether it would hold a forum giving those for and against the project a chance to speak. 
Antika responded that the team had only been given the job of planning how the riverfront area could be developed so everybody can enjoy it. She said a feasibility study was the responsibility of authorities. 
“We cannot say whether this project is appropriate or not. We only have to find out what is the most suitable way for the riverfront to be developed, and ensure that everybody gets equal rights to the river,” she said. 
She added that the KMITL’s blueprint would be used in the construction of the project, adding that all parties were invited to monitor the implementation of the plan. 
In response to the proposal to hold a debate, she said the team had already listened to opposing voices and had made adjustments accordingly. She said those opposing the plan were welcome to attend events and public hearings regarding the project. 
However, Yossapon said he was still worried about the vagueness of the plan because the KMITL team had not disclosed the full scope of the project. 
He also suggested that the decision to build a promenade intruding on the river concerned everyone, not just local residents, because the waterway belonged to the public.
 
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