New Building Byelaws

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tsubba - 14 March, 2008 | Bengalooru suddi | Bangalore | CDP | Masterplan | byelaws

A technical committee comprising of town planners, structural engineers, architects, representatives from the Fire Force, Airports Authority of India, Bangalore Metropolitan Region Development Authority (BMRDA), BDA and other service providers of the city is working on the revision of building bylaws for Bangalore based on the recommendations of the masterplan 2015. It will take atleast 3 months for the committee to work on the changes, then a draft will be sent to govt for approval. After this there is a month's time for citizens to file any objections. (Source: Building bylaws being revised, DH )

I think it might be useful to track this carefully.

Some questions I have. Feel free to add your own questions, better yet share your answers too.

What are the recommendations in masterplan 2015. What are the reasons for these changes?
The DH article has some details on what is expected for a 46x60 site. utilization goes up to 75% from the previous 65%. Setbacks will reduce from {10ft,5ft,5ft,5ft} to {7.2ft,4.8ft,3.14ft,3.14ft}. {Front, Back, Right, Left}
Is this going to be true for all zones across the city or does it depend on the locality?
What purpose do setbacks serve and do these numbers do justice for to that?
When it was difficult to survey and manage nice and easy round numbers how reasonable is to believe that these crazy fractions will work?

More critically, the DH article reports that the FAR has been increased to 1.75 irrespective of the width of the road in all zones!!!!! Earlier it was 0.75 to 1.0 FAR, depending on the zone in which the site was located.
Is this a recipe for disaster? The major roads are not able to deal with the pressure of existing FAR, what is going to happen when you increase the FAR? Remember, these are changes that will apply to not just new buildings but even those that already exist.


COMMENTS

Sometimes it is a question

mcadambi - 15 March, 2008 - 05:22

Sometimes it is a question of economics increasing the FAR. An increased FAR will lead to more built area and hence, greater economies of scale to ultimately cool down real estate prices. The average FAR for cities like New York / Hong Kong are much higher than Bengaluru.

But there should be a comprehensive traffic rule framework in Bengaluru similar to cities like NYC / HK et al. Only then will the roads handle transportation concerns of Bengaluru.


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