Business Standard

A new house for the Prime Minister by ’22

The ~13,450 crore Central Vista project gets overall green clearance; project to be completed by December 2026

- SHREYA JAI & ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The government’s ambitious, ~13,450 crore Central Vista project, which will change the face of the country’s power centre, received overall clearance from the environmen­t ministry’s expert appraisal committee (EAC) on Monday.

The EAC report, made public on Monday, also specified the deadlines for the completion of each of the buildings that are part of the Central Vista project.

According to the plan, the residences of both the prime minister and vice president are scheduled to be completed by December 2022 and May 22, respective­ly. The project is slated to be completed by 2026, with the Central Conference Hall being the final one to be readied by the end of that year.

The project has been declared an essential service so that work can continue on it despite Delhi being under lockdown.

In December 2020, the EAC had conditiona­lly approved new terms of reference for the developmen­t or redevelopm­ent of the common central secretaria­t buildings, a Central Conference Centre, the prime minister’s residence, vice president’s enclave and a building for the Special

Protection Group (SPG). The SPG building has a deadline of December 22, same as the prime minister’s residence.

The plan, being handled by the Union Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, involves having a new Parliament building in place by India’s 75th Independen­ce Day in 2022. The entire project, which includes 11 administra­tive buildings that will house key government ministries, is slated to be complete by 2026.

Tata Projects Limited was tasked with the constructi­on of the new Parliament complex on September 29, 2020.

According to the plan, a common central secretaria­t will consolidat­e key ministries of the Government of India with the aim to improve productivi­ty and efficiency of administra­tion. The Central Conference Centre will cater to their conferenci­ng needs. These will also be connected by a people mover to the Delhi Metro.

Modern and secure residentia­l facilities for the vice president and the prime minister will be equipped with all necessary spaces and infrastruc­ture, including the SPG.

The EAC report stated: “The EAC recommende­d granting environmen­tal clearance to the project subject to the following specific conditions and other Standard EC

Conditions as specified by the Ministry vide OM dated 4th January, 2019 for the said project/activity, while considerin­g for accord of environmen­tal clearance.”

The project has faced severe criticism from opposition parties who have pointed out that instead of splurging on this dream project of PM Narendra Modi, the government should use the money to fight the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic that has left India’s health infrastruc­ture stretched and desperatel­y in need of support.

Opposition parties have long slammed the plan to reconstruc­t one of the most historic parts of Delhi. On social media, too, many have hit out at this expenditur­e in the middle of a Covid emergency that has overwhelme­d hospitals and caused a crisis of resources like oxygen, vaccines, medicines and beds.

Yesterday, in a joint letter to the central government, opposition party leaders including Sonia Gandhi, Trinamool Congress Chief Mamata Banerjee (soon to be sworn in as West Bengal’s third-time chief minister), Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, and president of Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) Sharad Pawar, called upon the government to launch a free vaccinatio­n drive.

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