School children from eight schools in New Delhi will give Delhi a much needed facelift for Commonwealth 2010. |
There's excitement building up in the principal's room of Apeejay School, located in New Delhi's Sheikh Sarai area. |
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A group of students (all boys) are enthusiastically sharing their vision with us, for what they promise will be, "a cleaner, greener, modern Delhi". They're not alone in this dream. |
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Bentley Systems, in association with the Ministry of Science and Technology, announced a programme involving 11th and 12th class students from eight Delhi-based public schools and technical institutes like School of Planning and Architecture, IIT-Delhi and Delhi School of Engineering to help in providing a new look to Delhi for Commonwealth Games 2010. |
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While Bentley Systems has been exclusively focussing on design and infrastructure in India for the past 10 years, it is for the first time ever that such a unique exercise has been involved with school- and college-going students. |
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"Future Cities 2020 is a very successful programme in the US and students as young as 12 years old have given some fascinating, futuristic designs," says Bhupinder Singh, managing director, Bentley Systems. |
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Started as an educational engineering programme, the event in the US was aimed at encouraging students to take up a career in engineering. |
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"The programme," says Singh, "has been altered in India to engage students to create real-world infrastructure designs that will address real-world challenges." |
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That's explains why students from Apeejay School, besides other schools, are taking out four hours every week to study the software especially provided by Bentley. |
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With this software they will help provide solutions to the problems that will need to be tackled during Commonwealth 2010. |
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"We are certainly looking at offering solutions to control traffic, beautifying the Yamuna area without posing any environmental hazards, providing adequate foliage while placing signages intelligently," offers a student who is working on the project. |
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Mohit Bradoo, programme manager, BE Careers, Bentley System, explains, "We have a fixed grid in our software that enables students to use this basic template to come up with their own designs. These designs could range from roads and bridges to a general public system." |
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Students will work with a mentor (read, professional engineers) especially selected by Bentley and after the first phase, the projects will be sent to IIT-Delhi, SPA, Delhi College of Engineering and Netaji Subash Chandra Bose Institute of Technology for further refinement. |
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The entire exercise will be completed early next year when a jury from Bentley will select one unique project that the ministry will implement. |
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Students are busy testing the ground and viewing the existing drainage system. They will try and imagine this as a full-fledged Games Village with easy accessibility and roads and flyovers and, of course, a good public transport system. |
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"We are proud to be associated with a project that will give Delhi a facelift on Commonwealth 2010," says an Apeejay student. |
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