The sensitivity of our fore fathers towards the environment and its resources never
made us feel the agony of water scarcity. They understood the value of water and
tapped it through artificial water sources, which became sources of survival even
when our cities were not located near any natural water body. However, as the cities
developed and grew into larger metropolises, land value grew and land invariably
became an asset. The first casualties of such widespread development were the urban
water bodies that got converted into cesspools of urban sewage, mosquito-breeding areas and slowly degraded. Incessant land filling of these water bodies, which once were pristine waters sustaining life gave more land to build upon.