NBCC’s Bemina Township
NBCC’s
Bemina Township
“A year of silence after the
announcement of the Bemina Township has left residents questioning whether the
ambitious plans for sustainable living and modern infrastructure will ever
materialize.”
Peerzada Mohsin Shafi
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T |
he announcement of a satellite township at Bemina
in August last year had created a wave of anticipation across Srinagar. With a
memorandum of understanding signed between the Srinagar Development Authority
and NBCC, it was portrayed as the dawn of a new chapter in Kashmir’s urban
story. A project worth fifteen thousand crore rupees was promised to rise over
more than four hundred acres of land at Rakh e Gund Akshah with a design that
combined modernity sustainability and affordability. The people were told to
expect a township with high end villas and modest apartments commercial
complexes five-star resort sports arenas and above all over three thousand
affordable housing units. For a city long burdened by haphazard expansion and
housing shortages it was no less than a dream. One year has now gone by since
that MoU yet the township has not moved beyond the pre-construction phase.
At the time of signing the deal NBCC was declared
as both project management consultant and marketing consultant with the
assurance that the township would be executed in phases over five years. The
financial model was to be self-sustaining with revenue generated from sales of
residential and commercial spaces. It was pitched as a rare instance of urban
planning in a region where most growth has been unplanned and reactive. Yet a
year later there is no sign of ground breaking no tendering updates no announcements
of initial site works. The delay has raised eyebrows among people who have seen
several big-ticket projects in the past turn into nothing more than newspaper
clippings.
The idea of the Bemina township itself is
ambitious. Srinagar is a city under pressure with its population growing its
spaces shrinking and its infrastructure crumbling under seasonal stress. Every
year the need for orderly expansion becomes more urgent and every year
unplanned colonies mushroom in wetlands and floodplains making the city more
fragile. A planned township with sustainable design affordable housing and
proper amenities would provide much needed relief. It would also set an example
of how urban growth can be guided rather than left to chance.
An equally pressing concern has been the choice
of Bemina as the site. The area is notorious for waterlogging during heavy
rains. Residents of Srinagar know that when the Jhelum rises or when rainfall
is prolonged Bemina is among the first localities to get inundated. The 2014
and now 2025 floods left unforgettable images of water spreading through these
very plains. Critics questioned whether it was wise to place a township of this
scale in such a vulnerable zone. Officials however assured that the project
would not fall into the same trap. They argued that modern drainage systems
elevated platforms and flood mitigation infrastructure would make the township
resistant to seasonal inundation. The promise was that the new township would
stand strong against the very water that has historically disrupted life in
Bemina. This assurance was necessary but it must also translate into
engineering on the ground because words will not stop the rains from flooding
Srinagar.
The reality is that nothing has yet moved to
prove or disprove these assurances. For now, it is still a promise waiting to
be tested. The silence of the past twelve months creates doubt about whether
the design has been finalized whether feasibility studies have been conducted
or whether the planners are even ready to deal with the hydrological
complexities of Bemina. Without transparency on these fronts the township risks
being dismissed by citizens as another tall claim.
What makes this project different from others is
its potential to redefine urban planning in Kashmir. If executed well it could
showcase how large-scale sustainable housing can be achieved in a region prone
to floods earthquakes and environmental stress. It could also prove that
economic models based on self-sustaining revenues can work without burdening
the state exchequer. But for that to happen construction has to begin and
people have to see machines on the ground not just announcements in newspapers.
The authorities must also prioritize
transparency. Citizens deserve regular updates on where the project stands what
designs are being considered how flood mitigation is being integrated and when
actual construction will start. Silence only breeds suspicion and suspicion
erodes public trust. Urban projects of this scale succeed only when they carry
the confidence of the people whose lives they aim to transform.
The lessons of the 2014 floods cannot be ignored.
Bemina was one of the worst hit areas. Any township built there must be future
proof against a similar event. Ignoring this would mean repeating history at a
cost that no one can afford. Modern planning offers solutions like artificial
lakes retention basins green belts and smart drainage. These must form the
backbone of the township otherwise what is being promised as a dream city could
easily turn into a future disaster zone.
For the youth of Srinagar, the township is also
symbolic. It represents the possibility of jobs in construction and allied
sectors and later in hospitality and services once the township is functional.
It represents the possibility of affordable homes for families who cannot dream
of buying property in the inflated markets of old Srinagar. It represents a
vision where Srinagar expands with dignity instead of spilling into wetlands.
But all of this will remain symbolic unless work actually begins.
One year has been lost and the clock is ticking.
A project that was announced as transformative cannot afford to wither away in
the files. The authorities owe it to the people of Srinagar to either push the
project into implementation or clarify the reasons for delay. Leaving it in
limbo helps no one.
Bemina township remains at a crossroads between
promise and disappointment. Its fate will determine not just the skyline of
Srinagar but also the faith of its people in developmental planning. The slogan
that must guide its journey is simple. Promises on paper must become
foundations on ground. Until that happens the people of Srinagar will continue
to pass by the fields of Rakh e Gund Akshah and wonder whether those acres will
ever rise into the city they were promised or remain forever an empty plain of
unfulfilled dreams.
