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Fixing Footpaths: How a Mobile App is Tackling Bengaluru's Traffic Congestion

Thursday, May 21, 2026
5 min read
Fixing Footpaths: How a Mobile App is Tackling Bengaluru's Traffic Congestion

Bengaluru. You know the traffic jams. Cars, bikes, buses just stuck there for hours, always stuck. But there’s another thing everyone seems to ignore, something that piles up quietly: broken footpaths.

It’s not just some inconvenience. Without safe walkways, people are forced out onto the road. That just slows everything down. It creates this absolute confusion, and it just adds to the whole mess of congestion. It makes the traffic jams somehow worse, you know?

Then you have Surya Uthkarsha. He’s just a fourteen-year-old from Bengaluru. He posted something on X, a video, showing this app called RASTHE . It lets people report damaged footpaths straight to the BBMP . It’s a platform where you can just swipe, report it, upvote it.

His idea is really simple, almost maddeningly simple. If we’ve built roads for cars, then footpaths have to be built for people. That’s the vision.

And the best part, maybe the thing that sticks, is that suddenly everyone becomes a sensor for the city. Thousands of people can just share updates, right there, in real time. It gives the government some actual data. Data on exactly where the repairs are needed most.

RASTHE itself is built for people, not just vehicles. Fixing these footpaths isn’t just about walking. It’s about taking people off those busy roads. It cuts down the congestion. It makes the city actually walkable. It means safer routes for kids. Easy access for seniors. For everyone.

In thirty minutes, RASTHE shows you how much that traffic problem can actually be reduced if you just focus on the people first. Roads are designed for vehicles. Fine. But cities get stronger when they’re designed for humans. Fixing the paths? That fixes the traffic, too. It’s that direct.

People reacted, of course. A mix. Frustration, excitement, skepticism.

One person just said, “We’ll surely be happy to see this. The entire BLR needs a fix.” That felt real.

But then the doubt came in. Another one hit back hard: “People are just building apps. Who is actually going to fix the issues they raise? I’ve seen a dozen of these things, nothing ever actually changes.”

Then you got the sharper voice. It was demanding. “Stop creating more unnecessary apps. Someone needs to actually grab the BBMP by the balls if we want any change to happen to the infrastructure in Bangalore.”

But there was also that flicker of hope, too. Someone asked, “Is there a platform where someone will genuinely take action against the footpath riders?”

And then, just pure, unadulterated excitement. One comment just screamed it: “Omg excitingggg, just what we needed!!”

It’s all just moving, isn’t it? From gridlock to a mobile app. From ignored infrastructure to real-time pressure. It’s messy. It’s not clean. But for the first time, maybe something is actually starting to shift.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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