Relief for over 40k CHB allottees as panel revives need-based changes
Chandigarh, Feb. 13 -- In a development that will bring relief to nearly 40,000 allottees of Chandigarh Housing Board (CHB) houses, a UT-constituted committee has recommended the revival of the need-based changes policynotified on January 3, 2023, with a few modifications.
The 11-member committee had been constituted by UT administrator Gulab Chand Kataria last month to review the need-based changes policy, which had been put on hold following a Supreme Court order dated January 10, 2023.
Among the major recommendations, the panel has put on hold a clause related to independent CHB houses, stating that the board cannot uniformly apply the provisions of the Chandigarh Building Rules (CBR) (Urban), 2017, at par with marla houses, as is being followed by the Chandigarh administration. Most independent CHB houses are located in Sectors 46, 43, 38 (West) and Manimajra.
The committee has also pointed out that rooftop solar plants may not be feasible on every CHB dwelling unit due to practical and structural constraints.
The recommendations were finalised after reviewing various representations from residents seeking flexibility in structural and functional alterations to their dwelling units. The report will be submitted to the CHB chairman, who will subsequently place it before the UT administrator for approval and implementation.
The need-based changes policy was first introduced on March 23, 2010, and multiple modifications followed but it was put on hold after the Supreme Court, in its January 10, 2023 order, prohibited the conversion of residential units into floor-wise apartments in Sectors 1 to 30, citing the heritage status of the Le Corbusier zone.
Over the past four decades, CHB has constructed around 68,000 flats under various categories.
Officials estimate that around 80% of flats have some form of violation, including additional rooms and toilets, conversion of balconies into rooms, covering of courtyards and even construction of staircases on government land.
In the absence of a need-based changes policy, the board has not been able to legalise any such alterations. Nirmal Dutt, chairman of the CHB Residents' Federation, said that even if the 2023 policy is revived, it may not fully address the concerns of allottees. "As per the board's own records, more than 90% of flats have violations. Since these deviations do not follow any architectural pattern, we are seeking a one-time solution on the lines of the 1999 Delhi policy, which has now been implemented in seven states," he said....
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