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Poor response to building regularisation scheme

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The Hindu                      12.03.2013

Poor response to building regularisation scheme

Special Correspondent 

The response from Coimbatore so far to the guidelines by the State Government late last year for regularisation of buildings that have deviated or violated certain norms seems to be lukewarm.

According to the scheme, buildings that need to be regularised in the city should apply to the Corporation and those outside the city limits should apply to the local planning authority.

So far, there was hardly any request from the building owners.

The scheme says that the eligible buildings, which have deviated in issues such as road width, will not have any exemption on safety norms, parking space, pollution control board clearance and electrical clearance.

The building should be constructed before July 2007 and there should be no violation of land use classification.

K. Kathirmathiyon, secretary of Coimbatore Consumer Cause, says the State Government should relax some of the guidelines so that more buildings get regularised.

The focus should be on parking and safety norms.

In the case of commercial buildings, parking and safety norms should not be compromised.

However, if the building complied with these two norms, then there could be leniency in other factors.

The scheme should have separate guidelines for individual residential and commercial buildings.

Further, it should be open only for a fixed period.

The penalty is now based on the guideline value.

For individual residential buildings, the penalty should be reduced and should not be linked to the guideline value.

Buildings, residential and commercial, constructed till the date of the government order should be eligible for the scheme as this was the first time that such a scheme was available for cities other than Chennai in the State, he says.

So far, there is hardly any request from building owners.

 

Despite failures, corporation says it will evict hawkers in 4 months

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The Times of India                    11.03.2013

Despite failures, corporation says it will evict hawkers in 4 months

CHENNAI: The city corporation appears to be working on the motto "Better late than never". After several failed attempts, the civic body on Thursday informed the Madras high court that all illegal shops across the city will be removed in four months.

In T Nagar, one of the localities most affected by hawkers and illegal shops, the move has brought faint smiles on the faces of residents. Shanthi Nagarajan of T Nagar said the move is welcome as long as it is implemented effectively. "The traffic here is always heavy but as hawkers eat up the pavements, pedestrians take to the road leaving little space for vehicles."

Corporation officials said that the eviction drive will begin across the city soon. "We have received the number on encroachments from the traffic police. We will take severe action against hawkers." They also say that there has not been enough cooperation by police to keep hawkers away. "We have been conducting eviction drives regularly in the last few years but they always return to the spot after a few days. We cannot always keep an eye on the hawkers. It is also the duty of police," said a corporation official.

To add to the problem of pavements being occupied by hawkers, a study by a city-based NGO has found that most pavements in the city are less than 1.5m wide. A study conducted in 10 zones of the city by Transparent Chennai found that about 40% of the 830-km footpath in localities like Mylapore and T Nagar are less than 1m wide. Besides unauthorised parking of vehicles, electrical junction boxes, garbage bins and streetlights also take up space on the pavements.

The city has about 3,966 licenced hawkers in 31 designated areas, including Habib Ahamed Market, Chinnathambi Street, North Usman Road and Pantheon Road. But unofficial statistics show that their numbers go over 10,000. And if the Street Vendors Bill is passed in Parliament during this session the city could get up to 1.62 lakh licenced hawkers. This will bring the spotlight on the two multi-storied hawker's complexes in T-Nagar and Ayanavaram which are yet to be opened. 

Last Updated on Monday, 11 March 2013 10:19
 

Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority nod for housing projects on industrial plot

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The Times of India                     09.03.2013 

Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority nod for housing projects on industrial plot

CHENNAI: The Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) has agreed to allow residential projects on the trouble-gripped 10-acre plot at the Guindy Industrial Estate. The plot owned by Hindustan Teleprinters Limited has been on the block for the past five years, but failed to attract any buyer because of its classification as industrial land in government records.

With residential plots in the central business district fetching astronomical prices, if the land finally goes to a property developer, it may set a new benchmark in property price in the Guindy region. As industrial activities are fast becoming untenable in the city and developing new IT parks no longer a financially viable proposition, HTL approached the CMDA seeking clarification as to whether residential projects can be promoted on the site.

A high-level committee of the CMDA, which looked into the issue recently, has decided to permit residential activities on the property. A senior CMDA official said: "Under normal circumstance, we do not permit conversion of industrial land to residential one. But in the case of HTL, the state government, in the 1960's, had permitted the company to construct residential quarters for its staff members on a portion of the land. Against such a backdrop, we have decided to permit residential development on the entire land."

The property has been in the limelight for wrong reasons. In a closely contested auction, Bangalore-based RMZ Corporation decided to buy out the HTL property for 297 crore in 2007. The deal got stuck because the state government objected to it. Later, various courts, including the Supreme Court upheld the company's right to sell the land. Meanwhile, the State Bank of India took possession of the property in 2009. The bank is now looking at liquidating its debt exposure.

The land is situated off Anna Salai and fits all development parameters prescribed by the CMDA. "Going by the price (12,000 per sq ft) at which a builder launched a new apartment project in Guindy recently, it is anybody's guess as to how much the HTL property will fetch," said a builder. "If residential development is possible, the property may fetch more than 600 crore," said another builder.

The CMDA, meanwhile, is tightening screws on residential development in all industrial belts, including Old Mahabalipuram Road, also known as IT Highway.

An official said, "A distance of 500 metres on both sides of the OMR is earmarked for IT purpose. We have given permission for many residential projects in the IT zone on OMR in the past. But hereafter, residential projects will not be encouraged in the IT belt."
Last Updated on Saturday, 09 March 2013 09:48
 


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