Kasba (Kolkata)
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For disambiguation please see Kasba
Kasba is a suburb of the city of Kolkata, India. It is situated in the southern part of the city encircled by the Sealdah South section of the Eastern Railways to the west, Dhakuria and Haltu to the south, the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass to the east and the locality of Tiljala to the north.
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[edit] History
Once regarded as a notorious locality famous for political vendettas and other antisocial activities, Kasba is now thriving and on its way to becoming a well-developed locality.
'Kasba' means hamlet in Bangla and that was what it was - a hamlet for the people working in the nearby leather and allied factories of Tiljala and Tangra and also for the people working in various capacities for the residents of their highly prosperous neighbouring locality of Ballygunge just across the railway track to the west. (Incidentally, the word 'kasba', which means the same in Hindi and Bangla, also means the same as the Arabic 'casbah'. It is however, not recorded whether The Clash had South Calcutta in mind when they wrote 'Rock the Casbah'.)
The area received a major chunk of its current residents as a result of the partition of Bengal and India in 1947. The main attraction for staying in Kasba was that it was just across the railway tracks from Ballygunge and Gariahat and so commuting to the locality was not an issue. The locality was also served by the Ballygunge railway station, giving a boost to its reachability.
The first breakthrough for the locality came with the construction of the Bijon Setu, a flyover over the railway tracks right next to the Ballygunge railway station. This brought Kasba closer to the Kolkata mainstream and also resulted in quite a number of people finding the locality habitable. But the rowdy image of the locality persisted when, in 1982, some political workers murdered 17 members of the Ananda Marg sect on this very flyover.[1]
A recent and more auspicious development for Kasba was the linking of the Rash Behari Connector to the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass. This link made Kasba an integral part of the growth direction that the city was taking - towards the east. Kasba became more than just a passing area and stopover for a whole section of people taking the E.M. Bypass from Ballygunge and the whole south Kolkata. Cheap availability of land, proximity to the major business areas of the prosperous southern part of the city and excellent commuting facilities combined together taking this once volatile area to being one of the most economically viable and visible parts of the city.
The first developments took place around the junction of the Rash Behari Connector and the E.M. Bypass - the Kasba Golpark area. Ruby Hospital, the office of Siemens and a host of government-sponsored housing complexes came up in the area. Then the Meghalaya House shifted lock, stock and barrel to this growth region from their old premises at Russel Street, huge amounts of money began pouring into real-estate activities and this resulted in feverish construction activity all along the stretch of the Rash Behari Connector.
Apart from all these, Kasba has also become renowned for two of the biggest and well known Durga Pujas organised nowadays - the Kasba Bosepukur and Kasba Shitala Mandir pujas, which draws thousands of people from across the city and state.
[edit] Educational institutions
- Charu Chandra College (Evening Section), Rash Behari Connector
- Dolna Day School
- Delhi Public School
- Meghnath Saha Engineering College
- Heritage
- Vivekananda Vidyaniketan
- Birla Institute of Technology
[edit] Important establishments
- Ruby General Hospital, Kasba Golpark
- Siemens, Rash Behari Connector
- Meghalaya House, Rash Behari Connector
- Genesis Hospital
- Naba Ballygange Mahavidyalaya
[edit] Places of interest
- Kasba Bosepukur puja
- Kasba Shitala Mandir puja
- Adda Bites, a coffe cafe
- Kasba Amardeep Club
- Rene
==Famous person SUROJIT SAHA DEBJANI SAHA