SC bodyblow for 'Green Mumbai' drive
SC bodyblow for 'Green Mumbai' drive
The SC ruling approving a retail and office plan on a site of abandoned textile mills in Mumbai has been seen as a blow to the green drive.

Mumbai: The Supreme Court ruling on Tuesday approving a retail and office plan on a sprawling site of abandoned textile mills in Mumbai has been seen as a blow to groups that had called for green spaces.

Realty developers won an appeal at the court over their purchase of textile mills that have laid empty for about 15 years in the centre of Mumbai, India's financial and commercial capital.

The ruling is expected to trigger construction of shopping malls, cinemas and office space on the 600-acre site bringing rich returns to developers in the peninsula city on the Arabian Sea that has some the highest property prices in the world.

Mumbai is home to almost 20 million people, who scramble for housing and office space because of World War II-era laws that have kept rental prices low and dissuade new construction.

One company DLF, which spent more than Rs 675 crores to buy 17 acres of land, hailed the decision and said it would help high-end retailers secure space in the city after being blocked out because of a lack of shop space.

"We will be building for high end retail outlets who today don't have any opportunity to have places outside of five-star hotels," DLF spokesman Vijay Vancheswar said. "It's a good decision."

But environmentalists said the decision, which overturned a lower court verdict that would have halted some of the development, meant that the city had lost out on the opportunity for new green spaces and low-cost housing.

PAGE_BREAK

"This means the city loses 200 acres of green spaces and 200 acres that could have been used for low-cost housing," said Debi Goenka of the Bombay Environmental Action Group.

The group had attempted to block the sale of some 25 mills spread over 600 acres in prime locations of the city by the National Textile Corporation for real estate development.

The total site was estimated to be worth more than Rs 50O crores.

Mukesh Mehta, the architect of a plan to get rid of slums in Mumbai by 2020, however said the decision would create a new property hotspot in the city.

"It's a good thing. This will now become a very bubbling area and another major business area of Mumbai," Mehta said.

"We have crazy property prices and we have to rejuvenate Mumbai. This will become the new development area of Mumbai," he explained.

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://hapka.info/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!