Business Standard

Redevelopm­ent of railway stations put on fast track

- SHINE JACOB

To speed up the first phase redevelopm­ent of 42 railways stations under the ~1 trillion programme, the government has now adopted a cluster approach by making five public sector companies in charge of each cluster.

The companies include RITES, Mecon, National Project Constructi­on Corporatio­n (NPCC), Engineerin­g Projects (India) (EPIL) and Bridge and Roof Company (India) (B&R).

“These companies are in the process of finalising consultant­s. The stations are pooled in such a way that both land area and potential footfall are equally balanced,” said a person close to the developmen­t.

This approach is vital for completion of the station redevelopm­ent programme as the project saw a lukewarm response from real estate players in previous tenders.

Apart from these 42 pooled stations, Indian Railway Stations Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IRSDC), the nodal agency for station redevelopm­ent, has already taken up 13 stations for redevelopm­ent. A source

added that two stations – Habibganj (Madhya Pradesh) and Gandhinaga­r (Gujarat) – may be commission­ed by the end of July. For Gandhinaga­r, 80 per cent of the work has been completed while almost 70 per cent of the work is over in Habibganj.

On the other hand, the five PSUs are likely to finalise consultant­s for at least 25 stations

by the end of this month. Among the companies, Mecon, NPCC and EPIL are in charge of nine stations each.

However, B&R and Rites will be managing eight and seven stations, respective­ly. The major stations that are part of the current set include Pune, Aurangabad, Indore, Mumbai Central, Ranchi, Gandhinaga­r

(Jaipur), Allahabad and Bangalore Cantt.

In October 2018, the Union Cabinet had approved a new station redevelopm­ent policy making IRSDC as the nodal agency and allowing a longer lease period of 99 years, as compared to 45 years in the previous policy. The ministry of railways had opted for a revised policy after developers, investors and other stakeholde­rs wanted some key areas to be restructur­ed — including the multiple subleasing part.

The ministry of railways has already zeroed in on 600 stations across the country for redevelopm­ent, for which an overall investment of ~1 trillion is expected. On the other hand, stations taken up on public-private partnershi­p like Surat, Gwalior, Nagpur and Baiyappanh­alli are in the request-for-quotation stage.

Late last year, in order to give more power to IRSDC, it was converted into an equal joint venture of Ircon Internatio­nal and Railway Land Developmen­t Authority from being an Ircon subsidiary. Another key change that was brought into the policy was that developers can use 20 per cent of the railway land for housing projects.

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