Hindustan Times (Delhi)

DDA plans night cricket in south Delhi

- Abhinav Rajput abhinav@htlive.com

Ditch the white-collar shirt and grab the jersey. Pad up for the national past-time after a long day in office — not before a telly, but on a floodlit playground in south Delhi’s Siri Fort sports complex.

Night cricket is the latest offering from the Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA) to primarily people who miss their favourite indulgence because of their office timings.

The project will cost around ~1 crore and is expected to be ready by this yearend.

But before work starts, probably in a month, DDA officials had to dodge unexpected googlies that came their way.

“The main challenge was to ensure the floodlight­s don’t disturb the residentia­l neighbourh­oods around the complex,” a senior official said.

“We found there are floodlight­s that illuminate only the ground, not the surroundin­g areas. We will be using such lights.”

Cricket after sundown at Siri Fort, a multi-discipline sports complex, will cost slightly higher than the ~3,500 charged on weekdays and ~4,500 on weekends to book cricket grounds.

Practice nets currently have a weekday rate of ~300, and ~600 on weekends. The DDA will fix the fee later, possibly accommodat­ing the power charges for floodlight­s.

Besides cricket, the triggerhap­py can take aim at one of the city’s sought-after DDA-maintained destinatio­ns for sports enthusiast­s. It will offer a 10-metre indoor shooting facility in two weeks, replete with soundproof walls and coaches.

If Dangal is on your mind, the DDA’s sports complex in Rohini — the Rashtriya Swabhiman Khel Parisar — will offer a wrestling facility with rings and changing rooms in three months.

The authoritie­s hit these expansion plans to let maximum people enjoy its resources, especially at Siri Fort where getting a membership takes years and the demand peaks to a frenzy during the summer and winter holidays.

 ?? HT FILE ?? A floodlit Kotla will not be Delhiites’ only cricketing haunt.
HT FILE A floodlit Kotla will not be Delhiites’ only cricketing haunt.

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