A Better Way to Grow?

A Better Way to Grow?

-I; A BETTER WAY TO GROW? Land Readjustment through Town PlanningSchemes in Ahmedabad By MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECH oLoGy Chandan Deuskar JUN 3 0 2011 BA in Architecture Columbia University L IBRA R IES New York, New York (2007) ARCHIVES Submitted to the Department of Urban Studies and Planning in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in City Planning at the MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY June 2011 @ 2011 Chandan Deuskar. All Rights Reserved. The author hereby grants to MIT the permission to reproduce and to distribute publicly paper and electronic copies of the thesis document in whole or in part. Author Department of Urban Studies and Planning May 19, 2011 / Certified by Professor Bishwapriya Sanyal Department of Urban Studies and Planning Thesis Supervisor Accepted by /t"- r Professor Joseph Ferreira Chair, MCP Committee r C-1 Department of Urban Studies and Planning . .....................-- ------ --------- -- A Better Way to Grow? Land Readjustment through Town PlanningSchemes in Ahmedabad By Chandan Deuskar Submitted to the Department of Urban Studies and Planning on May 19, 2011 in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in City Planning ABSTRACT The Town Planning Scheme mechanism for the expansion of the city of Ahmedabad, India, has attracted widespread interest in recent years. It is seen as a participatory and equitable means of acquiring land from rural landowners on the urban fringe. A form of land readjustment, it allows local authorities to acquire a proportion of all the land parcels in a defined area on which to build public roads, parks, and other amenities. The authorities return remaining land to the original landowners in the form of reconstituted parcels, which have increased in value due to the improvements. The landowner pays half of this increase in land value to the government as a betterment charge, which helps the government covers its costs. As it appears to benefit both landowners and the government while also expanding urban infrastructure, proponents often claim that the TP scheme mechanism is a 'win-win' proposition. This thesis evaluates the extent to which the mechanism lives up to the claims made on its behalf. It compares the idealized version of the process laid out in legislation to how it actually works on the ground in Ahmedabad. While landowners and the government both do benefit financially, land valuation is carried out in a roundabout way, with large differences between calculated land values and actual market values. The mechanism is not as participatory as it is often described as being, with the state government playing a controlling role, and courts usually defending the government's use of its wide-ranging powers of discretion. Authorities also have not taken full advantage of the ability of TP schemes to house the poor. This thesis suggests alternative institutional models with which TP schemes could be made more efficient, and which would allow landowners to have greater control over the process. Thesis Committee: Bishwapriya Sanyal Ford InternationalProfessor of Urban Development and Planning Annette Kim Ford InternationalCareer Development Associate Professor of Urban Studies and Planning ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This thesis would not have been possible without the guidance of my advisor, Bish Sanyal. Working with him on this and other projects over the last two years has been a valuable learning experience, a source of many opportunities, and a pleasure. I would also like to thank my reader, Annette Kim for her insights; Yu-Hung Hong and Karin Brandt of the Lincoln Institute for Land Policy, who were instrumental in giving me the chance to research this subject; Stephanie Tam, whose comments helped me refine my argument; and Shiben Banerji, whose advice and guidance a few years ago brought me to MIT. I am grateful to all those who generously shared their time and expertise with me on my visits to Ahmedabad and Delhi: Shirley Ballaney, Bimal Patel, Patricia Clarke Annez, Chetan Vaidya, Ranesh Nair, Rutul Joshi, RB Joshi, Vatsal Patel, Snehanshu Mukherjee, Chirayu Bhatt, Sonal Shah, Dinesh Mehta and Genevieve Connors. Lastly, I would like to thank my family, as well as my classmates and friends at DUSP, for their support. CONTENTS Abstract 4 Acknowledgments 5 List of Tables and Figures 6 Glossary of Abbreviations 9 A Note on Terminology 10 1 Introduction 1| 2 History 15 2.1 Origins 15 2.2 TP schemes after Independence 19 2.3 TP schemes today 24 3 Rules and Realities 26 3.1 The Development Plan 26 3.2 The Town PlanningScheme mechanism: as prescribed 32 3.3 The Town PlanningScheme mechanism: as practiced 37 4 DP-TPS and the Public 55 4.1 Publicparticipation in the development plan 55 4.2 Publicparticipation in the preparationof TP schemes 56 4.3 TP schemes and housingfor the poor 67 4.4 TP schemes and the courts 75 5 Land Readjustment in Other Indian States 78 5.1 Maharashtra 78 5.2 Kerala 80 5.3 Andhra Pradesh 82 5.4 Tamil Nadu 82 5.5 Punjab 82 6 Conclusions 85 6.1 The future of TP schemes 85 6.2 Alternative institutionalmodels 92 6.3 Unresolved questions 94 Appendices 97 A List of AMC TP schemes and their sanction dates 97 B List of A UDA TP schemes and their sanction dates 100 References 103 LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES Table 1 Comparison of populations projected in the DP and measured 30 by the census Table 2 Land appropriation in 103 TP schemes prepared by AUDA 33 since 2002 Table 3 Observed use of AMC land intended for low-income public 68 housing Fig. 1 The western periphery of Ahmedabad 3 Fig. 2 Town planning schemes in Ahmedabad over the years 23 Fig. 3 AUDA's proposed land use plan for 2011 31 Fig. 4 Vinzol II TP scheme, showing the process of plot 35 reconstitution Fig. 5 Vatva VII TP scheme, comparing final plot values estimated in 40 TP scheme with observed market prices Fig. 6 Hansol TP scheme 45 Fig. 7 Narol Ranipur TP scheme 46 Fig. 8 Nikol Kathwada TP scheme 47 Fig. 9 Prahlad Nagar TP scheme 48 Fig. 10 Prahlad Nagar - photographs 49-50 Fig. 11 The process by which housing is added to the urban periphery 54 in Ahmedabad Fig. 12 Scenes from a landowners meeting 60 Fig. 13 The TPO consulting with landowners 61 Fig. 14 Chalk lines demarcating the new plots 61 Fig. 15 New TP schemes prepared to accommodate the ring road 64 Fig. 16 The completed Sardar Patel Ring Road 64 Fig. 17 Ghuma's landowners outside the AUDA office 67 Fig. 18 Public housing for low-income households built by AUDA on 69 land from TP schemes. Fig. 19 Residential property price index of cities in relation to their 73 own 2007 prices Fig. 20 Percentage of population living in slums in Indian cities with 74 total population greater than 1 million GLOSSARY OF ABBREVIATIONS AMC Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation AUC Ahmedabad Urban Complex AUDA Ahmedabad Urban Development Authority DP Development Plan DP-TPS Development Plan - Town Planning Scheme EPC Environmental Planning Collective GMADA Greater Mohali Area Development Authority GTPUDA Gujarat Town Planning and Urban Development Act JNNURM Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission MMRDA Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority SNP Slum Networking Project sq. ft. square feet sq. km. square kilometers sq. m. square meters sq. mi. square miles TP Town Planning TPO Town Planning Officer TPS Town Planning Scheme(s) TPVD Town Planning and Valuation Department TUDA Trichur Urban Development Authority A NOTE ON TERMINOLOGY The Town Planning (TP) Scheme mechanism is a type of "land pooling", "plot reconstitution" and/or "land readjustment" mechanism. According to Archer (1992), among other differences, "land pooling/ readjustment" projects recover costs through the sale of land only, while "plot reconstitution" projects recover costs through a betterment charge. As TP schemes do both, by this definition they would be considered a hybrid of the two. However, elsewhere, Archer himself makes a different distinction (1999), saying that the difference between "land pooling" and "land readjustment" is that in land pooling, the land is legally consolidated before being reconstituted and redistributed to the original landowners, whereas in land readjustment land is only notionally consolidated, making TP schemes a type of land readjustment. Given the inconsistent nature of these distinctions, this text uses the terms interchangeably. When discussing the use of land readjustment in different parts of India, the local terminology is generally used (eg. "Land Pooling Schemes" in Punjab). The terms "slum" and "informal settlement" are used interchangeably. Unlike in the United States, the term "slum" is used in a non-pejorative sense in India (for example by the National Slum Dwellers Association.) Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION As India urbanizes, its national, state and local governments have been trying in a variety of ways to address the challenge of acquiring land and providing infrastructure to accommodate urban growth. India is expected to remain predominantly rural in the near future, but even the anticipated shift from 30% urban (340 million people) in 2008 to 40% urban (590 million people) by 2030 will require the construction of "a new Chicago every year" in terms of commercial and residential space in cities (McKinsey Global Institute 2010). The Town Planning Scheme mechanism, as used in Ahmedabad in the western state of Gujarat, has received national attention in recent years as a relatively inexpensive, uncontentious, and equitable means of expanding urban infrastructure. This thesis tries to understand how this process works, who benefits from it, and how. Gujarat is one of India's most urbanized states.' Its urban population is 25 million, 44% of its total population (McKinsey Global Institute 2010).

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