BBMP admits to zoning violation in Panduranganagar, blames Master Plan

The town planning department has wrongly greenlighted a convention centre near Bannerghatta Road. Residents angered over this and other plan violations in the area.

The Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) has wrongly sanctioned a plan for a commercial building in Panduranganagar, located off Bannerghatta Road near the Indian Institute of Management, in violation of zoning rules in the city’s Revised Master Plan (RMP) 2015.

The building under-construction, a convention centre at Site No. 223 in the layout is on a plot size measuring 400 sq metres. Whereas, a minimum of 2000 sq metres is required for building a convention centre, as per the BDA’s RMP, which has not been followed by the BBMP’s Town Planning department in Bommanahalli zone.

The plan sanction for this convention centre under construction in Panduranganagar, has been wrongly approved by the BBMP Bommanahalli office. Pic: Vaishnavi Vittal

Speaking to Citizen Matters, a top official of the BBMP’s town planning department admitted that there has been a mistake in sanctioning this plan.

The official spoke under condition that he not be named as all sanctions are given by the sanctioning committee constituted for each BBMP zone, thereby not being the responsibility of a single official. The sanctioning committee consists of an Assistant Engineer, Assistant Director of Town Planning, Medical Officer Health, Chief Engineer, Deputy Commissioner and Joint Commissioner.

The official says, "Certain errors may be due to confusion in ancillary details mentioned", referring to rules in the RMP.

As per the Revised Master Plan 2015, Panduranganagar comes under the Residential (Mixed) category, thereby allowing both residential and commercial buildings to come up. Image Courtesy: Revised Master Plan 2007

In 2007, the BDA published the RMP 2015, Zoning of Land Use and Regulations. Under this, Panduranganagar has been slotted under a category named Residential (Mixed), meaning this area can be developed for both residential and commercial purposes. Even as the main land use is for residences, land can also be used for commercial purposes, specifically the C3 category. Convention centres are permitted under C3. (C1, C2 and C3 are the Master Plan’s classifications for commercial buildings).

The Residential (Mixed) section of the Master Plan says that for plot sizes between 240 and 1000 sq metres, with a road width of 18 metres, (60 feet) land use can be given for C3 purposes. Since the plot where the convention centre is coming up measures 400 sq metres with the road width of 18 metres, the official says BBMP sanctioned the convention centre on this basis.

However, this section also says that to use the land for commercial purposes, the Master Plan’s space standards (called Table 7) for various types of commercial buildings must be followed. According to these rules, for convention centres the plot size should be a minimum of 2000 sq metres, and the minimum width of the road should be 18 metres (approximately 60 feet).

A town planning department official says that the sanctioning error has occurred due to confusion in ancillary details mentioned under Table 4.2 in the Revised Master Plan. Image Courtesy: Revised Master Plan 2007

The Master Plan itself seems to be stating two different rules for similar plot sizes, thereby causing confusion.

Residents take BBMP to court

Interpretation of the Master Plan has been the basis for a legal battle that the Panduranganagar Residents’ Welfare Association (RWA) has launched against the BBMP. The Association says that the minimum plot size 2000 sq metres should have been the rule applied, and has recently filed a writ appeal in the High Court arguing that the current CDP (Comprehensive Development Plan) is not being followed during execution.

The plan sanction for the convention centre has been approved by the sanctioning committee of the BBMP’s Bommanahalli zone. Pic: Vaishnavi Vittal

The CDP is a statutory document that is for use by town planners to regulate development of the city in terms of land use. As per the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act 1961, this is revised every ten years. In 2005, the BDA brought out the Master Plan 2015. Certain sections of this, including zonal regulations were revised and published in 2007 as the RMP.

For almost two years now, this RWA has been opposing such violations in their area. K P Dinesh Kumar, 43, President of the Association says that their area is primarily residential and that commercial complexes should not be allowed. "After amendment of the CDP some people started applying for commercial building licenses", he says.

The RWA initially approached the BBMP with regard to two other sites, Site No. 72, where a gymnasium is coming up and Site No. 74, another commercial building which is currently vacant. Kumar says that they found these two buildings to have fewer cars parking provision than the prescribed limit.

The building that houses the gymnasium has parking space only for 13 cars, as opposed to the prescribed 16 cars since the floor area is 775 sq metres. While the vacant building has parking space only for nine cars, instead of the required ten cars since its floor area is 476 sq metres. The Master Plan says that there should be space for one car every 50 sq metres of the total floor area of the building.

The town planning department official denies any such violation with regard to parking, adding that an Occupancy Certificate (OC) would not have been issued by the Joint Director of Town Planning if parking violations were found.

In 2008 and 2009, the Association took the BBMP first to civil court and then to the High Court regarding some of the other cases. Their grounds were that Panduranganagar was a residential area and not commercial and they challenged the RMP itself. The efforts did not yield results. A single judge of the High Court merely asked the association to approach the BBMP directly.

Kumar and other members have since filed a writ appeal with a Division bench of the High Court, and have included the case of the convention centre. The case is likely to come up for hearing some time this week.

BBMP yet to respond to concerned residents

On February 2nd 2010, members of the RWA met the BBMP Commissioner Bharat Lal Meena to bring to his notice the unauthorised commercial buildings in Panduranganagar. They handed over a letter to him, mentioning each of the violations in the area. Kumar says that the Commissioner told them that he will look into the matter and forward the same to the Joint Director of Town Planning. The RWA has not received any communication from the BBMP after this.

BBMP’s sanctioning committee, Bommanahalli zone

Shivabasavaiah, Joint Commissioner – 25732628
M Ramakrishna, Deputy Commissioner – 25735608, 9480683434
Dr Suresh G K, Health Officer – 9845446455, 9739012260
Vijaykumar D Patil, Assistant Director of Town Planning
Also members: Chief Engineer, Assistant Engineer.

They have also approached members of the Chief Minister’s Agenda for Bengaluru Infrastructure Development (ABIDe) task force and the BBMP’s Bangalore Metropolitan Task Force. Further, they have written to the Additional Joint Commissioner (Bommanahalli zone) requesting not to issue licenses to commercial buildings in their layout.

Meanwhile, the fate of the convention centre coming up on Site No. 223 is still up in the air as construction work that began in 2009, is progressing slowly. The town planning department official refused to comment on what action will be taken next, but says that the building could be used for some other purpose mentioned in the RMP in accordance with the plot size.  ⊕

Comments:

  1. Pramod Naik says:

    Grt article to highlight yet another exhibition of BBMP’s monumental incomptence and indifference to citizen’s needs. Is BL Meena any use at all to the citizens?

  2. Srikanth Parthasarathy says:

    This is a typical example of carelessness in planning. No body would’ve predicted what would an ‘error’ cost in the future. And we all see it now. Chaotic state of affairs. Thanks for this brilliant report on a major error that they claim as confusion.

  3. Muralidhar Rao says:

    I would like to call upon the Pattabhiramnagar residents to put up their own candidate in the forthcoming BBMP elections, which alone can be the ultimate check on such rampant misuse of powers.

    I am myself going to be contesting on the LokSatta ticket.

  4. Narasim Katary says:

    Thank you for doing a good investigative report on “misinterpretation” of the zoning bylaw.

    One cannot help but admire the sustained efforts of RWA. Bravo!

    Let us all hope and work with RWA to ensure that such “misinterpretations” do not occur in the future.

  5. M Chandra shekar says:

    Hi Vaishnavi,
    Great journalism. Bravo. Keep it up. Let your journalism evoke sense of responsibility and accountability among these officials.

    Best Wishes
    ecopack

  6. Ragda says:

    If this is the latest master plan, then the green-zone is violated along the whole road.

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