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Dear ck.kislay,
You are subscribed to the thread "Delhi Real Estate Updates" by MANOJa, there have been 3 post(s) to this thread, the last poster was sunita3329.
https://www.indianrealestateforum.com/forum/city-forums/ncr-real-estate/delhi-real-estate/29842-delhi-real-estate-updates
These following posts were made to the thread:
https://www.indianrealestateforum.com/forum/city-forums/ncr-real-estate/delhi-real-estate/29842-delhi-real-estate-updates
Posted by: MANOJa
On: November 20 2017 09:22 AM
[h=1]Lutyens Bungalow Zone residents suffer as no nod for boundary plan yet[/h] Residents of upscale residential colonies like Golf Links, Panchsheel Marg, Jor Bagh etc want the ministry to take a final decision in this regard at the earliest.[URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/author/479191727/risha-chitlangia"]Risha Chitlangia[/URL] | TNN | November 19, 2017, 09:25 IST NEW DELHI: Two years after the [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/tag/lutyens+bungalow+zone"]Lutyens Bungalow Zone[/URL] (LBZ) boundary and development guidelines were put in public domain, the Union housing and urban affairs ministry is yet to notify it. Residents of upscale [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/residential"]residential[/URL] colonies like [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/tag/golf+links"]Golf Links[/URL], [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/tag/panchsheel+marg"]Panchsheel Marg[/URL], [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/tag/jor+bagh"]Jor Bagh[/URL] etc want the ministry to take a final decision in this regard at the earliest. Recently, a group of residents from Golf Links submitted a memorandum to housing and urban affairs minister Hardeep Puri in this regard. �We want the government to take a final decision at the earliest. The matter has been pending for the past two years,� said Sri Ram Khanna, a resident of Golf Links who met Puri. As per the new guidelines, prepared by Delhi Urban Arts Commission (DUAC), nine residential colonies � [URL="https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/tag/bengali+market"]Bengali Market[/URL], Jor Bagh, Sunder Nagar, Golf Links, Panchsheel Marg, Sardar Patel Marg, Mandir Marg, Chanakyapuri and Ashoka Road � have been excluded from LBZ. The guidelines were put in public domain in August 2015. Sources said DUAC had submitted a final report after going through the suggestions/objections received from public in June 2016. Government sources said the matter was under consideration. �But no decision has been taken so far. We are the ones suffering, as we can�t rebuild our houses. Our colony was included in the LBZ list in 2003. For the past 14 years, we have not been able to reconstruct our houses,� said YK Anand, president of Babar Road RWA in Bengali Market area. At Panchsheel Marg, Chanakyapuri, of the 14 houses seven fall under LBZ. �Our houses were constructed as per the 1962 Master Plan of Delhi. As our houses fall under LBZ, we can�t construct a second floor. Our families have grown, we need space. We just want the government to relax the norms so that people can reconstruct their houses,� said Radil Tuli, a resident of Panchsheel Marg, who has sought an appointment with the urban affairs minister. Sanjeev Chopra, a resident of Golf Links, said, �At present, we have ground plus one floor and a barsati. People need additional space, as families have grown. Our children have to live on rent, as there is not much space in the existing houses.� While many residents want the government to exclude these colonies from LBZ so that they can construct their houses as per the Unified Building Bye laws for Delhi, others don�t want it. They fear that this would spoil the residential character of the area. [url]https://realty.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/residential/lutyens-bungalow-zone-residents-suffer-as-no-nod-for-boundary-plan-yet/61709063[/url]
With warm regards,
Team IREF
https://www.indianrealestateforum.com/forum/city-forums/ncr-real-estate/delhi-real-estate/29842-delhi-real-estate-updates
Posted by: sunita3329
On: November 20 2017 01:26 PM
[b]DDA's Record In Securing Land Appalling: HC[/b] Terming the record of the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) in securing lands acquired by it "appalling", the Delhi High Court has directed creation of a unit for evolving land management policies and clear encroachments on public land. The direction was issued to the authority, the Delhi government and the Centre by a Bench of Justices S Ravindra Bhat and S P Garg which said the team or cell should be given statutory status, and be manned by high- ranking officers. The HC said the Centre should consider the feasibility of creating such a body with its personnel. "This unit or cell, in the opinion of the court, should continuously monitor the land management policies of the DDA, and ensure that wherever needed, court orders are implemented and also oversee all other relevant aspects," the Bench said. The directions by the court came while disposing of a 12-year-old PIL (public interest litigation) that said the DDA was unable to secure its land in Delhi and that a large extent of up to 42,000 acres was either encroached or not taken possession of. The Bench said that "the long, 12-year saga of this case has revealed that DDA's record in securing lands acquired by it and in taking over possession as well as in ensuring them to be encroachment free, has been appalling". It said there was never any clarity about the total extent of land acquired by the authority, and what was indeed in its possession. "Even as on date, precise details are not forthcoming, readily," the Bench noted. It said that acquisition proceedings were undertaken at considerable public expense with a view of executing a planned public project, but, before the project can start, the acquired land was encroached upon.
With warm regards,
Team IREF
https://www.indianrealestateforum.com/forum/city-forums/ncr-real-estate/delhi-real-estate/29842-delhi-real-estate-updates
Posted by: sunita3329
On: November 20 2017 01:27 PM
[b]Delhi Metro's Kalkaji-Botanical Garden Corridor Gets Safety Approval[/b] The Kalkaji Mandir-Botanical Garden corridor of the Delhi Metro which would reduce travel time between Noida and south Delhi had been granted a necessary safety approval, authorities said on November 20. The section, likely to open by the end of November, will be the Metro's first corridor to use communication-based train control (CBTC) signalling technology that will facilitate movement of trains with a frequency of 90 to 100 seconds. The commissioner for the Metro Rail Safety (CMRS) had granted the necessary approval for the 12.64-kilometre section after inspecting the stretch from November 13-15, the Delhi Metro said. "However, the approval is conditional and based on the compliance of some more requirements. The exact date of opening of the corridor will be intimated after the compliance of all the requirements specified by the CMRS," a release from the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) said. Currently, for travelling to south Delhi areas, commuters from Noida have to change trains, from the Blue Line to the Violet Line, at the Mandi House Metro Station. After the new section of the Delhi Metro is opened, commuters will be able to travel directly to the Kalkaji Mandir Metro Station, which is on the Violet Line. Once the entire corridor from Botanical Garden till Janakpuri West (38.23-km) is opened, commuters from Noida will be able to go to Gurgaon by changing trains at Hauz Khas. The Botanical Garden Metro Station has been developed as the first inter-change station outside the boundaries of Delhi.
With warm regards,
Team IREF
With warm regards,
Team IREF
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