Citizens react to Master Plan’s ideas to protect heritage in Bengaluru

The suggestions of the citizen group chalk out a roadmap to protect marked and unmarked heritage in Bengaluru.

For RMP 2031, a group working on heritage, Heritage Beku, with over 80 members, set up by Priya Chetty Rajgopal, has worked over three weeks to come up with a suggestions / objections document that was sent to the Bengaluru Development Authority (BDA). Besides response to the BDA’s RMP suggestions on heritage, the document also has objections, institutionalising heritage, concerns of urban planners, suggestions from experts etc. Do read the document for details.

[embeddoc url=”https://citizenmatters.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/RMP-2031_heritage-suggestions.pdf” download=”all”]

Comments:

  1. A Subba Rao says:

    I am having some extent of land in Bangalore rural.I wants to made it form plots horticulture at 500sqy.Is rera registration necessary sirs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

India Civic Summit 2026: Spotlight on changemakers transforming cities

From waste management to urban forests, the Indian Civic Summit spotlights residents that are driving change in their cities

Cities are the heart of the Indian growth story. Vibrant. Crowded. Diverse. Multidimensional. And yet, as we look around us, we find that they are ridden with problems and face multiple threats to their ecology, habitats and human lives. The crises in our cities make it hard to imagine an urban future that is truly inclusive, sustainable and marked by high liveability standards. But as the oft-cited quote from anthropologist Margaret Mead goes, "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."  That is perhaps the…

Similar Story

Stormwater, floods and the city: Inside a citizen audit of Bengaluru’s K200 drain

A walk along Bengaluru’s K200 stormwater drain shows shifting conditions every 100 metres, revealing flooding risks and repair possibilities.

I have been following the K100 stormwater drain (SWD) project for some time and had loosely worked on it in the past. Once neglected, this stretch from Majestic to Bellandur Lake has gradually been transformed into a critical part of the neighbourhood’s civic infrastructure. As I have a theoretical understanding of what Bengaluru’s stormwater drains are intended to do and why they matter, a citizen audit of the K200 SWD held on January 31st felt like a chance to move beyond theory and see things up close. The proposed audit focused on a stretch of the K200 running from HSR…