Lutyens' Delhi is an area in New Delhi, India, named after the British architect Sir Edwin Lutyens (1869–1944), who was responsible for much of the architectural design and building during the period of the British Raj, when India was part of the British Empire in the 1920s and 1930s and 1940s. This also includes the Lutyens Bungalow Zone (LBZ).
Sir Edwin Lutyens, the architect of Delhi, designed 4 bungalows in the Rashtrapati Bhavan Estate, (Viceroy House Estate); now, these bungalows lie on the Mother Teresa Crescent (then Willingdon Crescent). Lutyens, apart from designing the Viceroy's House, designed large government building and was involved with town planning.[1]
The area was constructed after the British decided to move the capital of their Indian Empire from Calcutta to Delhi, by creating a new district of the latter entitled New Delhi.
Before the new imperial capital was established in 1911, the Old Delhi Railway Station served the Agra-Delhi railways, the line cut through what is today called Lutyens' Delhi. The line was eventually shifted to make way for the new capital and the New Delhi Railway Station was built near Ajmeri Gate in 1926.[5]
Design and construction
Lutyens led a group of architects in laying out the central administrative area of the city, with the charge of retaining one-third of the area as green space.[citation needed] At the heart of the city was the impressive Rashtrapati Bhawan (formerly known as Viceroy's House), located on the top of Raisina Hill. The Rajpath (formerly Kingsway) connects India Gate (formerly known as All India War Memorial) to Rashtrapati Bhawan, while Janpath (formerly Queensway), which crosses it at a right angle, connects South End Road (renamed as Rajesh Pilot Marg) with Connaught Place. Currently, Droupadi Murmu is the President of India, and stays in the official house of Rashtrapati Bhawan.
The Lutyens Bungalow Zone covers an area of about 26km2. All land and buildings in the LBZ belong to the central government, except for 254.5 acres (103.0ha) which is in private hands. It is a very important and expensive zone in New Delhi. There are about 1000 bungalows in the LBZ, of which less than ten percent are in private hands.[8]
In order to create development control norms, the Ministry of Urban Development constituted the 'New Delhi Redevelopment Advisory Committee' (NDRAC) in 1972, when the redevelopment of the areas around the walled city, north of Connaught Place and on Prithviraj Road was taken up.[9]
Land prices
In 2013, it was reported that the market value of the 254.5 acres (103.0ha) of land in private hands in the LBZ had increased eightfold in the previous ten years, from around ₹6,100 crore (US$760million) to ₹49,000 crore (US$6.1billion).[10]
In June 2014, Rajiv Rattan, Indiabulls co-founder, bought a 2,920-square-yard (2,440m2) plot for ₹220 crore (US$28million).[8][11]
In December 2016, Renuka Talwar, daughter of DLF Chairman KP Singh, acquired a bungalow on Prithviraj Road for ₹435 crore (US$54million) in one of the biggest deals for a property in Lutyens' Delhi.[12]
Contiguous areas
Around the great green expanse of the LBZ, is a thick swathe of green, a glacis of trees, and manicured lawns, and grand buildings, that protect and cushion LBZ from the swirl and swarm of Delhi's crowded parts: on the west is the vast wooded area of the Delhi Ridge, adjoining the grand acres of the Presidential Estate; to the west and south is Nehru Park, the Race Course, the Air force station, the Delhi Gymkhana Club, Safdarjung Airport, Safdarjang Tomb, and the Diplomatic enclave; to the south is the Lodi Gardens, with its fabulous Lodhi era tombs, and remains; on the SE are great lavishly tended greens of Delhi Golf Club, with its Mughal era ruins; and beyond the Golf course, on the edge of the LBZ boundary is the green stretch of National Zoological Park, lakes, the Purana Qila, and the Humayun's Tomb. The contiguous areas are lavished with as much care by the government as the LBZ. Those who can't buy into the LBZ buy into the contiguous areas, like Jhor Bagh, where property prices are almost as steep as in the LBZ.[9]
Notable residents
The official residence of the Prime Minister of India is at 7, Lok Kalyan Marg, a complex of five bungalows, spread over 12 acres (4.9ha). The former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also resides here.[13] He was allotted a Type VIII bungalow, on 3 Motilal Nehru Marg (formerly known as York Road), previously occupied by Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit, on 27 February 2014 by Kamal Nath Minister of Urban Development, on account of his being a Rajya Sabha MP from Assam. Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi are some of the other politicians who lived at 10, Janpath. Former Prime Ministers who are not members of Parliament (MPs) are not entitled to a government bungalow, however, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, another former Prime Minister and not a Member of any house, used to reside in a bungalow on Krishna Menon Marg from 2005 until his death in 2018.[14]
Ganju; MN Ashish (November–December 1999). "Lutyens Bungalow Zone". Architecture + Design, an Indian Journal of Architecture. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
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