by Mr. Anil Pharande,
Chairman - Pharande Spaces & Vice President - CREDAI (Pune Metro)
The Pimpri Chinchwad
Municipal Corporation (PCMC) is all set to merge 20 more villages into its city
limits, thereby giving these rural areas the benefit of its globally acclaimed
infrastructure - based model of planned urbanization. The list of villages to
be included is as follows:
Dehu,
Vitthalnagar,
Mhalunge,
Nighoje,
Moyi,
Kuruli,
Nanekarwadi,
Kharabwadi,
Chakan,
Kadachiwadi
Chimbali,
Kelgaon,
Alandi,
Khalumbe,
Gahunje,
Hinjewadi,
Manh,
Marunji,
Nere, and
Jambhe
Of these, Chakan is
the most important area from the perspective of industrial growth. Hinjewadi is
among the most gripping chapters in the history of India's Information
Technology sector - Dehu and Alandi are major pilgrimage destinations.
We are once again
witnessing the process of urbanization that has made the PCMC a global showcase
model of holistic development.
The geographical
expansion of city limits has historically been proven as the only viable means
of rational urbanization. Without the benefit of expanding city borders, a city
tends to densify and eventually stagnate.
A city's ability to
grow geographically directly affects its economic diversity and health. In
fact, the Indian real estate story shows us that the only cities that retain
and increase their economic viability are the ones that have the ability to
expand. By the same coin, cities which do not or cannot grow eventually
stagnate in terms of infrastructure, property market potential and their
overall 'liveability' quotient.
Why Indian Cities
Over-Densify And Decay?
Some of the most
serious problems that stagnated cities face are over-crowding, pollution,
unrealistic rises in property prices, gradual reduction in employment
opportunities & generalized urban decay.
In India, this
phenomenon is not always the result of lack of peripheral rural areas to
urbanize. Relative to its available land resources, India has remarkably few
modern cities - and these cities offer the maximum number of employment. As a
natural consequence, people from the rural areas steadily migrate to urban
areas to earn a better livelihood.
While many Indian
cities do have the ability to expand their borders, lack of forward - looking
city planning leads to rapid densification within the urbanized areas.
At the same time, the
peripheral areas that could relieve the strain on these urbanized pockets
suffer from complete neglect, leading to a huge disparity in economic profiles.
When these cities
finally expand their borders, they do so as a means of 11th hour damage control
and with a remarkable lack of vision.
As a result, we see
areas that nobody had ever heard of suddenly being profiled as 'upcoming
locations'. Developers / promoters rush to these areas, attracted by the lower
land prices, and lose no time in putting up 'affordable housing' projects
before any kind of supporting infrastructure has been put in place.
This phenomenon has
been seen in various parts of the country, including in Mumbai, Chennai
& Delhi NCR.
Planned Urbanization
- The Inclusive Approach..
Over the years, the
Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation has been attracting more and more people
from the nearby areas. The PCMC model of urban development is based on planned
social and civic infrastructure and the scientific allocation of residential,
commercial and industrial areas.
This fabric needs to
maintained by geographic expansion, and this is precisely the process we are
now witnessing. Including more villages into the municipal limits brings
prosperity, real estate development and infrastructure to these areas. The PCMC
has consistently employed the method of expanding the spread of its real estate
map as the most viable means to prevent core congestion.
For Media Contact
Mr. Jay Kalghatgi
Client Interface -
CopyConnect
Mobile: 93201 42248
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