Collected Image The images of Pakistan’s largest cities drowning in knee-deep water during monsoon season are no longer shocking—they have become routine. For residents of Karachi, Lahore, Sialkot, Faisalabad, Sargodha,
NED University entrance can be seen in this image. — neduet.edu.pk/File Recent monsoon rains exposed deep flaws in Karachi’s infrastructure and civic management, causing unprecedented hardship for citizens. This was
At a recent discussion hosted by the Urban Resource Centre in Karachi, architects and town planners examined the city’s devastating monsoon flooding. A clear consensus emerged on what the rest
Experts have linked Karachi’s recurring urban flooding to blocked drainage systems and flawed city planning, warning that the situation will worsen unless urgent corrective measures are taken. At a discussion
The Urban Resource Centre (URC) on Tuesday organised talks by experts, architect and town planner Arif Hasan and NED Professor Dr Noman Ahmed, about the current flooding situation in big cities
IN reporting on floods, four terms have been used constantly. They have traditional planning-related meanings, which can no longer be applied to them because of the phenomenon of climate change.
Each monsoon turns Karachi into a drowning city, not because of rain alone but due to man-made negligence… COVER STORY Each monsoon turns Karachi into a drowning city, not
Acknowledging Karachi’s unplanned growth, Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Thursday said the provincial government was spearheading a comprehensive, World Bank-backed master plan focusing on transport, water supply,