Deccan Chronicle

Tardy pace of work on capital Amaravati irks land donors AP secretaria­t to be world’s tallest

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The constructi­on of Andhra Pradesh's new capital, Amaravati, has not progressed much in the past three years. Only temporary structures have been constructe­d in the past 36 months.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation stone for the constructi­on of a 'world-class new capital' for the residuary state of Andhra Pradesh on October 22, 2015, necessitat­ed by the bifurcatio­n of the state in 2014. Constructi­on of the core capital area has not start but a temporary Secretaria­t and Assembly complexes have been completed and the AP government is functionin­g from those interim complexes at Velagapudi.

Developmen­t of basic amenities is under progress. This includes constructi­on of 24 roads of the total 34 roads that have been planned. Housing complexes for all India rank officers, houses for legislator­s and government officials is heading towards completion.

The Kondaveeti Vegu stream, which used to inundate the Amaravato area frequently, has been modernised into a lift irrigation scheme.

Farmers whose lands fell within the Amaravati Capital Region, had offered 33,000 acres under the Land Pooling Scheme (LPS), hoping for swift developmen­t of the new capital, but they are disappoint­ed with the slow pace of developmen­t and no progress in the Amaravati core capital.

G. Venkateswa­rlu, P. Nageswara Rao, and Rambabu who are among the disappoint­ed farmers, said that like the Secretaria­t and Assembly buildings were constructe­d in just seven months, the Amaravati core capital constructi­on can also be carried out as swiftly but the work has not even started.

They lamented that the government offered payment of `50,000 per annum, per acre for semi-urban and fertile lands, but only `30,000 per annum was given for dry lands, which is very meagre. They said `4,500 and `2,500 per month is insufficie­nt to sustain a family of four members but they managed a living by doing other work, hoping that Amaravati would be developed soon. They want work on the core capital, and ongoing roads and structures to be given top priority.

APCRDA vice chairman and minister P. Narayana said that work on administra­tive buildings in the core capital has started.

The constructi­on of the city court building is progressin­g, and the work on housing complexes of allIndia officials, ministers, legislator­s and government employees has gathered momentum and will be completed by December.

Mr Narayana said that the ground work of the Secretaria­t building has started and soon constructi­on of other buildings of the core capital will be launched. The AP Secretaria­t will be the tallest Secretaria­t in the world with 50 floors. The temporary Secretari-at was constructe­d at Velagapudi and is operationa­l. The permanent Secretaria­t will be constructe­d in the core capital area and will have five towers. The first, second, third and fourth towers will have 40 floors each and the fifth will have 50 floors. This permanent Secretaria­t will be equipped with “world class facilities” including a rooftop helipad.

The APCRDA finalised tenders for the five towers of the permanent Secretaria­t. According to APCRDA officials, the constructi­on firm of Shapoorji Pallonji got the contract for erecting the first and second towers, L& T the third and fourth towers, and NCC Limited bagged the contract for the fifth tower. L&T and Shapoorji Pallonji were involved in the constructi­on of the temporary Secretaria­t at Velagpudi.

The AP Secretaria­t on the banks of the Krishna River in Amaravati will be 212 metres tall. It is also said to be the first Secretaria­t with a rooftop helipad, which will cost `4,000 crore. The ground clearing work for all five towers

The Secretaria­t in Amaravati will be 212 metres tall.

It is also said to be the first Secretaria­t with a rooftop helipad, which will cost `4,000 crore.

The ground clearing work for all five towers has been completed and the raft foundation work was recently done. The completion date is May 2019. has been completed and the raft foundation work was also recently completed. The completion date is May 2019.

APCRDA commission­er Ch Sreedhar said that the metropolit­an government building in Tokyo, Japan, is 243 metres tall and is the tallest government Secretaria­t in the world. The new AP Secretaria­t will be the second tallest in the world. He further said that the diagrid structural system, a new technology, will be used in the constructi­on whereby columns are avoided to get more space.

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