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Will demolish wrongly sanctioned construction project in Rishikesh: State to HC

The case involves a building plan approved on December 21, 2024, in Awas Vikas Colony in Rishikesh. The approved project was presented as a single-dwelling floor plan.

Published on: Apr 17, 2025 10:29 AM IST
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The Uttarakhand government on Wednesday informed the state high court that it will demolish the contentious wrongly sanctioned construction project in Rishikesh and take action for compounding violations at the stage of sanctioning the construction plan by the Mussoorie Dehradun Development Authority (MDDA) within one month.

The Uttarakhand high court in Nainital. (HT File Photo)
The Uttarakhand high court in Nainital. (HT File Photo)

The case involves a building plan approved on December 21, 2024, in Awas Vikas Colony in Rishikesh. The approved project was presented as a single-dwelling floor plan. However, photographs submitted as evidence revealed a four-story structure under construction, which the court noted starkly contradicts the sanctioned proposal.

The division bench of Chief Justice G Narendar and Justice Alok Mahra expressed serious concerns over alleged violations in the construction project in Rishikesh during a hearing of a writ petition on Wednesday. The court observed discrepancies between the sanctioned building plan and the actual construction

Abhijay Negi, counsel of the petitioner Pankaj Kumar Aggarwal, said Garhwal Commissioner Vinay Shakar Pandey, who is also the chairman of MDDA, and MDDA vice chairman Bansidhar Tiwari informed the HC that the wrongly sanctioned construction project in Rishikesh will be demolished.

The HC order further noted, “Interestingly, the plan approval comes with compounding area calculation, i.e. even at the stage of sanctioning the plan, the Authority has already acknowledged what would be the extent of violation in the times to come and what is the extent they would be compounding”.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Neeraj Santoshi

Neeraj Santoshi is the Chief of Bureau for Hindustan Times in Uttarakhand, where he leads the state reporting team while covering government, politics, environment, wildlife, Uttarakhand High Court, and issues shaping the Himalayan region. With more than two decades in journalism across conflict zones, he has covered politically sensitive regions and environmentally fragile landscapes, and focused on stories that combine public interest with in-depth storytelling. An alumnus of Pune University with a Master’s in Communication Studies, he has reported extensively from Jammu & Kashmir (2003-2010), Madhya Pradesh (2010 to 2018 ) and Uttarakhand (Since 2018), covering subjects ranging from insurgency, elections and governance to wildlife conservation, mining, climate change, agriculture, human rights and social justice. He has covered politics and legislative assemblies of both Jammu & Kashmir and Madhya Pradesh over more than a decade. Before taking over as Chief of Bureau in Uttarakhand, he served as Special Correspondent with Hindustan Times in Madhya Pradesh and earlier reported for both Hindustan Times and The Indian Express in Jammu & Kashmir, where he covered state politics, environment and insurgency-related developments. Over the years, his stories have focused on environmental degradation, wildlife, illegal mining, governance and the changing social fabric of Himalayan states and Central India. He is particularly interested in long-form explanatory journalism, and stories that explore the intersection of ecology, conservation, governance and society. Outside the newsroom, Neeraj enjoys reading widely on neuroscience, consciousness studies, Artificial Intelligence and quantum physics, with a special interest in Kashmiri Tantric Shaivist traditions. He is also passionate about wildlife, mountaineering and the Himalayas, interests that continue to inform his reporting and deepen his understanding of the region he covers.

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