A MANHATTAN SKYLINE FOR THE CAPITAL?
Fuelling a debate, skyscrapers are changing the Delhi skyline. While some welcome the change, some are dwelling in nostalgia. Which side are you on?
Which is the tallest building in your city? Till now, for Delhiites, the answer was the Municipal Corporation of Delhi’s Civic Centre. But, according to reports, this will change soon, when a 46-storey twin tower in Karol Bagh will take shape — the newest skyscraper that Delhi can boast of. And this high-rise, which heralds the changing cityscape of Delhi, has garnered mixed feelings from the city dwellers.
While some are sceptical about the change saying that the character of the city will be lost, some are more open about it. Welcoming such development, architect Stuti Garg says, “For Delhi to come on the world map, where all metro cities have skyscrapers, it’s important to get a landmark like this.”
Vijay Risbud, former DDA commissioner of planning, says, “For group housing projects, according to Master Plan (2021), there is no height restriction. The entire picture of Delhi is changing. Two-storey houses in Kidwai Nagar, Nauroji Nagar are being redeveloped to multi-storeys. This gives a new lease of life to the old buildings.”
But, will the development not take away the heritage value of the Capital? “The proposal to make Delhi a [UNESCO World] Heritage City was killed because all this development would have stopped then,” says historian-author Sohail Hashmi. However, one can’t expect a Manhattan skyline all of a sudden in the city, points out Garg, who feels that in order combat the rising population one has to encourage skyscrapers.
Disagreeing with Garg, Hashmi says encouraging construction of high-rises will add to the pressure on land. “The city has been given to private builders, and old places are growing vertically. If an old building has outlived its life, repair it and build it up to four floors. There is no possibility of expansion of the Ring Road where Kidwai Nagar has come up. When people move in there, the already congested road will become more crowded. And there is a scarcity of water in Delhi. While providing solution to the population, we are not thinking the rising demand of water. There is a lot of infertile land outside Delhi, why not develop that?” he questions.
Supporting his argument, Rajni Bhatia, a resident of Delhi for the past 56 years, says, “It’s good to talk about skyscrapers, but can the city handle it? Why not develop areas outside Delhi? I don’t want the skyline to change. I don’t want tall buildings to suffocate my city anymore.”