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Delhi Development Plan

DDA has made a remarkable change in the land acquisition policy by approving land pooling policy in March. The policy was cleared by the Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung. Click here to read more.

Delhi New Zones Map

Delhi Development Authority (DDA) is set to unleash in the next few years in the Capital. About 20 lakh residential units will come up on the outskirts of the Capital on about 24,000 hectares of land that will be developed, READ MORE...

New Delhi Master Plan 2021

New Delhi Master Plan 2021 has allocated 277 sq km for future urbanization by 2021. In the last fifty years, DDA has acquired 75,609.84 hectares and developed it for residential, recreational, commercial and institutional purposes. READ MORE...

Mr. Balvinder Kumar, IAS, Vice Chairman, Delhi Development Authority (DDA)

Mr. Balvinder Kumar, IAS, Vice Chairman, Delhi Development Authority (DDA),Guest of Honour, sharing his vision about the Land Pooling Policy of DDA in Conference organized by New India Initiative Foundation. READ MORE...

DDA Land Pooling Policy Got Approvals On Regulations to Operationalize

DDA has approved the regulations for operationalisation of this land pooling policy wherein public private partnership in land assembly and its development has been envisaged. READ MORE...

Thursday, 22 January 2015

DDA Housing Bonanza, 20 Lakhs Residential Units Coming Up

Get ready for a housing bonanza that the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) is set to unleash in the next few years in the Capital. About 20 lakh residential units will come up on the outskirts of the Capital on about 24,000 hectares of land that will be developed, offering world-class infrastructure.
The next two months will see the housing authority implement its ambitious land pooling policy under the close supervision of Union Ministry of Urban Development. It is in the process of appointing two consultants for the same.
A senior DDA official said one consultant will oversee the infrastructural development to facilitate construction of world-class infrastructure and the other will look into the requirement of roads and transport facilities in the upcoming colonies.


Objective

The land pooling policy was approved by the UD ministry on September 5, 2013. The main objective is to prohibit sale of land without the owner's consent at the same time enabling private players to create housing pockets in the city.
According to the policy, a number of small holdings will be pooled and a part of land taken from the pool for the provision of infrastructure and public facilities. The DDA will provide basic facilities like education, health, water, sewerage and others amenities, while the rest of the land will be returned to the original owners for development. Another bright side of this is that after land has been pooled, the owners will get back around 40-60 per cent of the total land surrendered. So, for every two to 20 hectare land pooled, about 48 per cent will be returned to the owner.
According to DDA officials, the step will give a boost to realty development in Delhi on the lines of Noida, Gurgaon and Faridabad in the National Capital Region. "We can expect construction of five to six lakh new residential units in the next six to seven years and will continue for the next 15 years," said a senior DDA official. According to the Master Plan of Delhi (MPD) 2021, the Capital has still about 27,000 hectares which can be developed as sub-cities. MPD-2021 has divided the Capital into 15 planning zones (divisions) designated from 'A' to 'P'.
Officials said the authority has earmarked land at many zones, including zones J, K, L, N, P1 and PII for development. According to the projections in the master plan, nearly 24 lakh residential units are required for an estimated 23 million people by 2021.
A senior DDA official admitted that the largescale acquisition policy as per the earlier version of the Delhi Master Plan adopted in 1961 had failed to keep pace with the rapid pace of urbanisation witnessed in Delhi.
"The land pooling policy was proposed in the new master plan only to fill the huge gap of residential requirements. This will replace the present model of acquiring and disposal of land by the DDA," the official said.
In the last 50 years, DDA has acquired 75,609.84 hectare land and developed it for residential, recreational, commercial and institutional purposes. Now, with better and holistic planning, the housing authority intends to set new records and provide more amenities to people.
A DDA official said the authority now envisages wider public participation to bring in more transparency by inviting objections and suggestions.
Moreover, for each 1,000 Ha of the pooled land, the government would be able to provide a housing stock of 50,000 dwelling units for the economically weaker sections.

Source - India Today

Delhi Real Estate Plans to Get 10 Lakh New Houses by 2021


If the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) has its way, the national Capital will get more than 10 lakh houses by 2021, the year when the population in the metropolis will touch the 2.3 crore mark. The development body and the Ministry of Urban Development have come out with a magnificent solution - urban extension area on the outskirts of Delhi, which will see massive developmental projects.
DDA's spokesperson said the development of around 20,000-24,000-hectare land will give several housing options to an additional 48 lakh people in Delhi by 2021. The DDA will develop the areas with the help of private builders under the recently-approved Land Pooling Policy.
The DDA officials have selected the areas strategically keeping in mind the future infrastructure needs. "The areas along the major transport corridors and fringes of already urbanized areas have been earmarked for the urban development," said a DDA official.
"The housing options will come up in the line of residential development in Dwarka and Rohini. The policy proposes to carry out development in urban extension areas by involving private parties. The new sub-cities will be developed with all facilities," said a senior DDA official.
Officials involved in the review of master plan 2021 said the housing development would be coupled with all infrastructural developments. "As per the plan, proper cities will be developed having all the facilities such as schools, colleges and hospitals," said an official.
Moreover, one needs not to worry about the distance from the working place to the new sub-cities as they will be developed across the metropolis.
"In the early phase, seven zones have been selected for the development. These are Zones like J, K1, K2, N, L, P1 and PII that will be spread across the city. For example, if zone J is in south Delhi alongside NH 8, zone L will be developed in Najafgarh of west Delhi. Similarly, zone PI and P II are alongside the national highway I and zone N is beyond Rohini," said the official.




This will be possible as the DDA has made a remarkable change in the land acquisition policy by approving land pooling policy in March. The policy was cleared by the Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung on Friday.

The policy has several elements of public-private partnerships. Landowners, including farmers, can form consortiums and tie up with private builders or banks to consolidate their land parcels and develop the plots according to the zonal plans approved as part of the Delhi Master Plan-2021.

After the land has been developed, the landowners can transfer a part of the land back to themselves. The DDA will be in charge of the infrastructure development on the consolidated land for which a certain part of the land required will have to be transferred to the agency, said a senior official.
Explaining the concept of Urban Extension areas, the official said, "In future, urbanisation has to be in the areas that have development potential like the areas along the major transport corridors and fringes of already urbanised areas. Therefore, in the 2021 master plan, it has been envisaged that the area under existing designated rural would be absorbed as urban extension from time to time with due regard to a balanced city development.
A senior DDA official admitted that the large-scale acquisition policy as per the master plan adopted in 1961 had failed to keep pace with the rapid pace of urbanisation witnessed in the metropolis. The land pooling policy was proposed in the new master plan in an attempt to fill the huge gap of residential requirements," added the official. 


Source - India Today