Why in the news?
- The southern zone Urban Development Ministers meeting was held in Bengaluru.
Urban Planning in India
- What is it?:
- Urban planning in India involves the design and management of the physical, social, economic development of cities and towns.
- It includes land use, transportation, housing, environment, infrastructure, and public service planning.
- The goal is to create sustainable, inclusive, and livable urban spaces to meet the needs of growing urban populations.
- Significance of Urban Planning:
- India’s urban population rose from 17% in 1951 to over 36% in 2021, expected to reach ~50% by 2047.
- Urban areas contribute ~65% of India’s GDP (NITI Aayog).
- Planned urbanization ensures:
- Efficient land use and transport
- Climate resilience
- Affordable housing
- Balanced regional development
- Reduction of slums and congestion
- Key Components of Urban Planning:
- Land Use Planning: Zoning cities for residential, commercial, industrial, and recreational purposes.
- Transportation Planning: Designing efficient road networks, public transit, and traffic management systems.
- Infrastructure Development: Access to water, sanitation, electricity, and waste management.
- Environmental Management: Promoting green cover, pollution control, and disaster resilience.
- Housing and Social Facilities: Affordable housing, schools, parks, and healthcare access.
- Economic Development: Encouraging business growth and job creation within urban areas.
- Key Schemes and Policies:
- 74th Constitutional Amendment (1992): Mandated establishment and empowerment of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) for decentralized governance.
- Smart Cities Mission: Focuses on sustainable and citizen-friendly urban infrastructure.
- AMRUT (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation): Emphasizes water supply, sewerage, parks, and urban transport.
- National Urban Challenge Fund (Budget 2025-26): ₹1 lakh crore fund to finance urban infrastructure with PPP and bond mechanisms. Cities to raise ₹40,000 crore via municipal bonds and loans.
- National Geospatial Mission: Uses geospatial data integrated with PM Gati Shakti for urban planning, land record modernization, and infrastructure projects.
- Schemes for Urban Planning Reforms: Financial and policy support for reforms including building bylaws modernization, Transit Oriented Development (TOD), Transferable Development Rights (TDR), In-situ slum rehabilitation, and sponge city development.
- Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (Urban)
- Urban 20 (U20) under G20 Presidency: Focus on sustainability and inclusivity.
- ‘500 Healthy Cities Programme’ (Proposed): Focuses on health-centric urban planning via integrated spatial, health and social development planning.
- Challenges:
- Planning fragmentation and overlapping roles between multiple agencies and levels of government.
- Inadequate financial resources and poor revenue generation by Urban Local Bodies (ULBs).
- Low accountability and weak institutional capacity.
- Rapid unplanned urban growth leading to congested, polluted, and underserved areas.
- Lack of coordinated metropolitan and regional planning.
- Deficits in infrastructure provision and maintenance.
- Way Forward:
- Integrated Urban Planning Framework: Coordination between land use, transport, housing, and environment.
- Empowered Urban Local Bodies: Devolution of finances, functions, and functionaries (3Fs).
- GIS & AI-based Planning: Adoption of digital twins, spatial data infrastructure, and simulation models.
- Capacity Building: Through National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA) and Gati Shakti Vishwavidyalaya.
- Citizen-Centric Governance: Participatory planning and smart governance tools.
- Sustainable & Resilient Cities: Climate-adaptive designs, renewable energy integration.
- Urban Finance Reforms: Strengthening municipal bonds, PPPs, and credit enhancement mechanisms.