
Eco-friendly is the buzzword at the National Rail Museum. The
verdant landscape provides a perfect foil to the machines that moved
India
The Railways are the most environment-friendly transportation
system in the country. And the National Rail Museum (NRM) which
preserves the rich heritage and the culture of the Indian Railways
is doing everything to popularise the theme of green railways. The
effort that started last year from June 5 to July 17 as a festival
called Van Mahotsav in coordination with Lions Club Delhi
Metropolitan has already changed the look of the place.
On World Environment Day, which was celebrated on
June 5 last year, a 40-day plantation drive was launched by NRM.
Three thousand saplings of different varieties were planted on the
museum’s premises. The campaign ended on July 17 with numerous
social development activities aimed at the poor and the physically
handicapped children organised on that day. Special concessions were
also made available to children.
Van Mahotsav not only showcases the contribution
of the Railways towards preserving the environment but also
highlights the active role played by NRM in promoting an
environmentally conscious society through various non-formal
education programmes and activities. The agenda focusses on rail
travel as energy-efficient and environment-friendly; lays stress on
growing more trees and decries the felling of trees; calls for
proper arrangement for garbage and sewage disposal, attempts to
create awareness about synergy between transport, energy and
environment; and tries to inculcate values on protecting and
preserving the environment.
Special care has been taken by the authorities to
project NRM not only as a tourist landmark that provides amusement
through education but build it up as another haven for
nature-lovers. It is in this light that environment-friendly steps
like planting of trees and maintaining a clean and pollution free
ambience for visitors have been accorded prime importance. The
trains that are in operation like the joy train and the Mono Rail of
Maharaja Patiala are only hauled by steam locomotives. There are
lush green trees all around. The fragrance of flowers wafts across
the entire area and refreshes visitors as they stare in awe,
locomotives and other works of genius spanning over 150 years and
glean information about them. The rolling juggernauts are no longer
running over iron rails in the heat and dust and spewing fumes of
smoke. They stand majestically on the verdant landscape and are
proof of days of glory. Now visitors, catalogue in hand, can ramble
around the exhibits that dot a large area, sit under a tree and
wonder at these bewitching rail beauties that rode majestically in
days of yore.
This year the museum authorities have launched
another plantation drive starting from World Environment Day. Around
1,000 saplings of 25 varieties appropriate to the area are being
planted over 10 acres. Plans are also afoot to organise programmes
and activities somewhere around August under Van Mahotsav.