| Public Interventions – Railway Lighting Campaign | |
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The Gender & Space project in partnership with the Central Railways spearheaded a project to improve the lighting at Central Railway suburban railway stations in order to facilitate women\’s access to stations and to increase their sense of safety while commuting after dark. The project completed an extensive study of the lighting conditions of all CR stations from CST to Thane on the Main line and up to Mankhurd on the Harbour Line. Central Railway then began a process of augmenting lighting in line with the recommendations made by the Gender & Space project. Urban Lighting Across the world women particularly have pointed to lighting as an important factor promoting a sense of increased safety and therefore access. This insistence on better lighting was also reflected in the interviews and focus group discussions we conducted and in our analysis of questionnaires on safety issues, as part of our research on the Gender & Space Project at PUKAR. This was articulated most often in relation to railway stations, bus-stops and the streets that they had to walk on to get home. Several women recounted alighting at an earlier or later station, which they felt were better lit and therefore safer, when it was late at night. The Study on Railway Station Lighting In the survey conducted between August 2004 and January 2005, stations were assessed for adequacy of lighting in five areas: A full report on each station was submitted to the Central Railway authorities. Our intention was to study lighting not in terms of measurement of lighting levels but through a comprehensive survey based on our own subjective perceptions. Lighting levels were assessed for adequacy both in terms of brightness and the context. That is, corners, staircases and foot-over-bridges, may need more than average lighting as these tend to be perceived as spaces to fear by women. We also spoke with random women commuters asking them what they felt were the threatening areas at various stations. All stations were not the same but some broad areas of concern emerged. Toilets were often dimly lit or completely dark; the staircases from the foot-over-bridges often had only one tube-light, which was grossly inadequate. Exits were rarely lit at all and any illumination usually came from nearby shops. Unused platforms at slow stations tended to be dark and threatening. We also found that tube-lights tended to provide better light than yellow bulbs.
Press Articles on Gender & Space work on Railway Lighting • |
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