Colaba Woods

Colaba woods Garden
Mumbai, Maharashtra

Colaba woods garden
Colaba woods Garden
Coordinates 18°54′46.6″N 72°49′09″E / 18.912944°N 72.81917°E / 18.912944; 72.81917
Type Garden
Height sea Level
Site information
Owner Municipal Corp. Of Mumbai
Open to
the public
Yes
Condition Well Maintained
Site history
Built 1980(approx)
Built by MCGM
Materials Bricks
Map of colaba woods

Introduction

Colaba Woods is a garden in the Colaba area of Mumbai, India.

Colaba Woods is located near the President Hotel in South Mumbai. About 5 km from the CST railway station.[1] The Colaba woods garden is located on C.T.S. No. 87A and 88B. It is spread over 31,000 m2. It is a beautiful wooded tree garden near to high sky scraper buildings.In the early 80's the Tata Electric Company took over an eight-acre plot of land from the MCGM. This was called as Colaba woods. It was a refuse dump. Today this green forest in the concrete jungle at Cuffe Parade is the lung of the locality. It has several facilities like joggers' track, an amphi-theater, a readers' corner for street children, basketball courts, children play areas and areas for relaxation. Colaba Woods won the Urban Heritage Award in 1989.

Tree enumeration study

In 2015, the Mumbai Metro Rail Corporation revealed its plans to use up a quarter of the Colaba Woods for construction of the Colaba metro station.[2] To save the garden by highlighting its biological diversity, the local residents sanctioned an elaborate survey of the area.[3]

A tree enumeration study was carried out by botanist Dr. Chandrashekhar Marathe during the month of April- 2015 to create an inventory of Tree species. Each tree was noted, identified, its girth (Stem circumference) was measured by measuring tape, the height and canopy diameter was noted approximately. A rough sketch of the Garden was made. The garden was divided into zones for convenience. The pathways were taken as zone boundary.

During the study, a total of 803 trees were mapped and measured.[3] Of the 803 individuals counted, 14 were dead. The 803 number of Trees that were observed during the survey belonged to 99 species. Out of total 803 tree species 543 trees are exotic while the remaining 260 are Native species. Out of 803 species about 284 trees are more than 10 m (30 feet) in height, which is rare in South Mumbai's densely populated urban area.[3]

Some of the unique tree species are as below:

In the entire Mumbai region, 368 tree species were identified in the tree census report. In Colaba woods alone, 99 species are found. Trees like Undi, Ambada and Variegated Wad, Mysore fig and Mabolo trees are unique to this Garden, this shows the richness of the garden in terms of variety of trees in 3 Ha of land. There are 104 fruit bearing trees. This amounts to 13% of the total trees. The fruit bearing trees play an important role in providing fruits and shelter for birds, bats and squirrels.

The study cautioned against cutting down of these trees for the metro station, arguing that relocation of trees is not an option. Giant trees with more than 150 cm girth and 10 m height would not sustain the shock due to relocation. The present tree population would be subjected to major threat due to air pollution, rise in local temperature and water logging of the soil. The removal of trees in the garden area will remove the green cover around the garden; this would lead to rise in the temperature. The untreated slurry and muck if allowed to stagnate in the garden area would lead to percolate huge amount of water in the soil. This will hamper the respiration process of the roots of the giant trees. Almost all the trees are showing healthy growth now. However massive civil developmental work would disturb the local climate which would ultimately lead to destruction of trees.

How to visit

This garden is at 30 mins drive from CST railway station. Best means to reach from any part of the south Mumbai is by BEST buses . The garden is open for visitors from 7am to 10am and in the evening 4.30pm to 8pm. Photography and collection of plants and flowers is not allowed in the garden.

Gallary

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.