The
City and Industrial Development Corporation of
Maharashtra or
CIDCO is a city planning
organization created by the
Government of Maharashtra. CIDCO
was formed on
17 March 1970 under the Indian Companies Act of 1956.
Its
purpose at the time of its creation was to develop a satellite town
to Mumbai,
Maharashtra India
to ease traffic congestion in the city and provide
open spaces, playing fields, housing and industrial sites outside
the city.
Formation of CIDCO
Between
1951 and 1961, the population of Mumbai
rose by 50%
and in the next decade by 80.8%. This rapid growth was due
to the increasing industrial and commercial importance of the city.
It resulted in a deteriorated quality of life for many of the
city's inhabitants. Expansion of the city was limited by the
physical location of the city on a long, narrow peninsula with few
mainland connections.
In 1958, the government of Bombay appointed a study group under the
chairmanship of S.G. Barve, Secretary of the Public Works
Department, to consider the problems of traffic congestion,
deficiency of open spaces and playing fields, housing shortages,
and over-concentration of industry in the metropolitan and suburban
areas of the city and to recommend specific measures to deal with
these.
The government of Maharashtra accepted the Barve group's
recommendation to examine metropolitan problems in a regional
context. In March 1965, the government appointed another committee
chaired by Prof. D.R. Gadgil, then-director of the Gokhale
Institute of Politics and Economics, Pune. This committee was asked
to formulate broad principles of regional planning for the
metropolitan regions of Bombay, Panvel and Pune, and make
recommendations for the establishment of metropolitan authorities
for preparation and execution of such plans.
The Gadgil committee submitted its report in March 1966. It
recommended creation of regional planning boards for notified
regions, starting with the Bombay and Pune regions. To establish
such boards, it also recommended passage of a Regional Planning
Act. The Gadgil committee also recommended a planned
decentralization of industrial growth in the Bombay region as well
as the development of the mainland area as a multi-nucleated
settlement. These multi-nucleated settlements, each 250,000 in
population, were proposed as a series of nodes strung out along
mass transit axes, self-contained, with respect to schools,
commerce and other essential services, and separated from each
other by green spaces.
The government passed the
Maharashtra
Regional and Town Planning Act, 1966 and brought it into effect
in January 1967. Subsequently, the Mumbai metropolitan region was
notified and a regional planning board was constituted in June 1967
under the chairmanship of
ICS
officer L.G. Rajwade. The draft regional plan of the board was
finalized in January 1970. It proposed the development of a city
across the harbour on the mainland to the east to attract jobs and
population away from Mumbai.
The board
recommended that the new metro-centre or Navi Mumbai
, as it is now called, be developed to accommodate a
population of 21 lacs. This recommendation was accepted by
the government of Maharashtra. Accordingly, the City and Industrial
Development Corporation of Maharashtra Limited was incorporated on
17th March 1970 under the
Indian Companies Act, 1956. By
February 1970, the government notified for acquisition of privately
owned land covering 86 villages and measuring 159.54 km²
within the present limits of Navi Mumbai. Land belonging to nine
other villages, measuring 28.70 km², was additionally
designated in August 1973 for inclusion in the project area.
In March 1971, CIDCO was named the New Town Development Authority
for the project. In October the same year, CIDCO undertook to
prepare and publish a development plan as required by the
Maharashtra
Regional and Town Planning Act, 1966. The corporation started
functioning as a company fully owned by the state government with
initial subscribed capital of Rs. 3.95 crores from the government.
It was entrusted with developing necessary social and physical
infrastructure and was also entitled to recover all costs of
development from the sale of land and constructed properties.
The goal was to shift population and commercial activities from
Mumbai to Navi Mumbai, which would be sustainable physically,
economically and environmentally. The new city was projected to
gain two million people and 750,000 jobs from the 1970s through the
1990s.
The impact of Navi Mumbai on the growth of Mumbai was reflected in
the 1980s. The 1991 census recorded a 10% decrease in population
growth rate for greater Mumbai, compared to the previous decade.
For the island city (a part of greater Mumbai), growth in the 1980s
was negative for the first time. The reason for this phenomenon can
partly be attributed to the growth of extended suburbs and partly
to Navi Mumbai which provided an alternative path for growth.
Organization
The corporation is controlled by a board of directors appointed by
the state government. Day-to-day management is provided by the vice
chairman and managing director supported by a team of joint
managing directors, made up of the chief administrator (New Towns),
the heads of various departments and personnel from various
technical and non-technical disciplines, including officers,
engineers and subordinate staff.
The corporation is managed according to the Companies Act and the
Memorandum of Articles of Association of the Corporation. Decisions
are made through a democratic process including department-head
meetings, committee meetings, board meetings and general meetings.
Annual reports on the working and affairs of the company, with
audit reports, are regularly laid before the houses of the state
legislature. The Board of Directors of CIDCO meets at least once a
month.
Objectives of CIDCO
CIDCO was given a mandate to undertake all development as works and
recoup the cost of development from the sale proceeds of land and
constructed property. Based on the mandate, CIDCO set several broad
objectives for itself. It aims to prevent population influx into
Mumbai, diverting it to the new town, by providing an urban
alternative which will lure citizens wishing to relocate to a city
of peace and comfort. Immigrants are to be absorbed from other
states and efficient and rational distribution of industries is
promoted by preparing a ground for them who otherwise could have
opted for Mumbai. CIDCO plans to provide basic civic amenities to
all and elevate standards of living for people of all social and
economic strata. Moreover, it wants to offer a healthy environment
and energizing atmosphere in order to utilize human resources at
their fullest potentials.
Course of action
In order to achieve these goals, CIDCO started to develop land and
provide the required physical infrastructure such as roads,
bridges, drainage and sewerage system, drinking water system and
street lights. It has built a stock of houses supported by social
infrastructure such as community centres, markets, parks, education
institutes and playgrounds. It promotes commercial activities,
warehousing, transportation and decentralisation of government
administration. Lastly, it involves agencies in the development of
public transport and telecommunication.
Development of Navi Mumbai International Airport
The new international airport, perhaps to be located in the
Kopra-Panvel area, may be built through public-private partnership
(PPP), with a private sector partner having 74% equity while the
Airports Authority of India (AAI) and the Maharashtra government
(through City and Industrial Development Corporation or CIDCO)
would hold 13% each. The International Civil Aviation Organisation
(ICAO) has already given techno-feasibility clearance to the
Navi Mumbai
International airport.
Other than Mumbai
Besides Mumbai, CIDCO operates successfully in Aurangabad, Nashik,
and Nanded in Maharashtra state. Some very successful projects have
been undertaken by CIDCO in Aurangabad. Aurangabad city's
localities are named as Neighbourhood-One (N-1), Neighbourhood-Two
(N-2) through N-12. The Aurangabad division has now been handed
over to the Aurangabad Municipal Corporation.
A new development in Aurangabad district is in Waluj. It is
12 km southwest of Aurangabad city and is well connected to
the city. These projects are approximately sixteen times the size
of those executed in Aurangabad city. One more CIDCO plant has been
undertaken south of Aurangabad city, near Gevrai village beside the
Sahara city project.
References