Sun, 17 May 2026
Maharashtra News Updated May 17, 2026 · 15:06

Amit Shah Calls for Modern Urban Planning in India's Real Estate Sector

Union Home Minister Amit Shah inaugurated the Ganesh Real Estate Management Institute in Ahmedabad, emphasizing the need for modern urban planning. He criticized the ad-hoc growth of Indian cities without proper infrastructure planning. Shah highlighted the town planning schemes introduced during Narendra Modi's tenure as Gujarat chief minister. The institute aims to address gaps in real estate and urban development through specialized education.

India needs modern urban planning, skilled real estate leadership: Amit Shah

Ahmedabad, May 17

Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit Shah on Sunday said inadequate town planning had prevented Indian cities from developing properly, as he called for more structured and forward-looking urban development policies while inaugurating the Ganesh Real Estate Management Institute in Ahmedabad.

Speaking at the launch event alongside the inauguration of Million Minds Tech City in Tragad neighbourhood, HM Shah said most Indian cities had expanded without long-term planning and infrastructure preparation.

"When town planning is not proper, good cities are not built. Unfortunately, in our country, most cities kept growing first, and later we tried to provide facilities," he said.

He said the real estate sector in India had historically developed only to meet immediate needs and had rarely been approached comprehensively.

"Issues linked to the environment, planning frameworks and town planning schemes had not been adequately integrated into urban development. No one has ever attempted to address it in a comprehensive manner," he said.

HM Shah referred to the introduction of town planning schemes during Narendra Modi's tenure as Gujarat chief minister, saying it marked "one of the first attempts in India to plan infrastructure and civic facilities" before large-scale settlement took place.

"I remember when town planning schemes were introduced, for the first time in India, planning for facilities before people started living there was initiated," he said.

He added that global urban planning and technological standards had advanced significantly, and many dimensions of modern city planning had still not received adequate attention in India.

The Home Minister said GREMI had been established to address those gaps through specialised education and research in real estate and urban planning.

The institute will begin operations in a 30,000-square-foot facility with an initial batch of 300 students. Its main campus is planned near Khodiyar Lake on a 100-acre site with an estimated investment of around Rs 500 crore.

"It is possible that in the beginning it may not cover all dimensions, but if the beginning has happened, then it will definitely move ahead," HM Shah said.

He said the sector required skilled leadership, modern thinking and the ability to adapt to international changes in Indian conditions.

The event was attended by Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel, Deputy Chief Minister Harsh Sanghavi and officials of Ganesh Housing Limited.

— IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Ananya R
I'm glad the Home Minister mentioned town planning schemes from Gujarat's Modi era. But let's be honest—even Gujarat has traffic jams and haphazard construction in many areas. This institute sounds promising, but we need implementation at the ground level, not just fancy buildings and courses. 🌆
R
Rohit P
Rs 500 crore for a campus near Khodiyar Lake? That's a huge investment. I hope the focus is on affordable urban planning for the common man, not just luxury real estate projects. Our cities need proper drainage, public transport corridors and green spaces, not more gated communities.
K
Kavya N
As someone who works in real estate, I completely agree with Amit Shah ji's point. Indian developers have traditionally been reactive rather than proactive. We need professionals who understand sustainable urban planning, not just builders who maximize floor space index. GREMI could be a game-changer if they get the curriculum right. 👍
J
James A
Coming from a Western perspective, it's interesting to see India acknowledging these urban challenges. In many US cities, comprehensive planning was done decades ago but now we face issues of urban sprawl and aging infrastructure. Perhaps India can learn from both our successes and failures to build smarter cities from scratch.
S
Siddharth J
The Home Minister correctly identified the root cause—Indian cities were never planned for the population explosion we've seen. But I'm a bit skeptical about another institute. We need actual policy changes: strict enforcement of building bylaws, incentivizing vertical growth in city centers, and protecting green belts. Indore and Surat have shown it can be done. Hope GREMI produces leaders who can replicate that across India.

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