MUMBAI (Reuters) - Indian billionaire Gautam Adani aims to convert Mumbai's Dharavi slum into a modern city hub, while acknowledging that resettling its 1 million residents will be a challenging task.
Bipinkumar Padaya (C) live in a one-storey home crammed into a tangle of alleys - Copyright ENGINEER JEROME MARTINEZ/AFP Handout Bipinkumar Padaya (C) live in a one ...
For upper-floor dwellers in Dharavi, a new opportunity arises with the government's latest resolution: the chance to secure a 300 sq ft home. However, eligibility hinges on the agreement of those ...
Mumbai, March 28: The Navbharat Mega Developers Private Limited (NMDPL), the SPV executing the Dharavi Redevelopment Project, has refuted claims by vested interests that the DRP survey had declared 96 ...
In relief for residents of legal, planned structures in Dharavi, the state Urban Development department on Thursday announced that eligible occupants will now receive 500 sq ft homes under the Dharavi ...
Indian billionaire Gautam Adani is eyeing a high-profile slum in Mumbai for his next redevelopment project. Adani is looking at turning the Dharavi slum — made famous by the Oscar-winning film ...
A bench of Justices M S Karnik and S M Modak held that the challenge was belated and could not be entertained, particularly since the planning proposal for Dharavi had already been sanctioned in 2016 ...
Dharavi upper-floor residents can get homes under DRP, but affidavit claims depend on eligible ground-floor occupants, officials said. Upper-floor residents eligible if ground-floor unit qualifies ...
Upper-floor residents in Dharavi can now get new homes. Eligibility depends on ground-floor occupants. A new government rule ...