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MHADA to hand over 500 redeveloped BDD homes in Naigaon

#Law & Policy#Residential#India#Maharashtra#Mumbai City
Synopsis

MHADA will begin handing over 500 redeveloped homes to eligible residents of the Naigaon BDD Chawl project in Mumbai from 6 June. The allotments are part of the Maharashtra government’s redevelopment of the century-old BDD chawls at Naigaon, Worli and N M Joshi Marg. The new apartments replace ageing tenements with larger homes and improved amenities. The handover marks a key milestone in the rehabilitation of thousands of residents under one of Mumbai’s largest public housing redevelopment programmes.

The Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (MHADA) will commence the handover of 500 redeveloped homes to residents of the Naigaon BDD Chawl redevelopment project in Mumbai from 6 June, marking a significant step in the rehabilitation component of the state's large-scale redevelopment programme for the historic Bombay Development Department (BDD) chawls. 
The homes are part of the ongoing redevelopment of the BDD chawl clusters at Naigaon, Worli and NM Joshi Marg, a project being implemented by MHADA on behalf of the Maharashtra government. The redevelopment seeks to replace ageing residential structures built nearly a century ago with modern housing complexes while providing upgraded living conditions to existing residents. 
Under the rehabilitation framework, eligible residents who previously occupied compact BDD tenements are being allotted larger self-contained apartments within newly constructed towers. The project is intended to address structural deterioration, inadequate infrastructure and limited living space that have characterised the original chawl settlements for decades. 
The 500 units being handed over are located in completed rehabilitation buildings at the Naigaon site. Officials stated that the distribution process has been scheduled following the completion of construction and necessary approvals. Beneficiaries will receive possession of their apartments through a structured allotment process overseen by MHADA. 
The BDD redevelopment programme is among the largest public-sector urban renewal initiatives in Mumbai. The original BDD colonies were developed during the colonial era and comprise thousands of tenements spread across valuable land parcels in central Mumbai. Over the years, concerns regarding building safety, overcrowding and ageing infrastructure led to calls for comprehensive redevelopment. 
The state government approved the redevelopment plan to rehabilitate existing residents while also creating additional housing and supporting infrastructure. The new developments include residential towers, open spaces, internal roads, community facilities and supporting civic amenities designed to accommodate rehabilitated families. 
Officials indicated that the handover of the latest batch of homes represents progress in the phased implementation of the project. Additional rehabilitation buildings are expected to be completed and handed over as construction advances across the larger redevelopment scheme. 
The redevelopment has been closely watched by urban planners, housing experts and residents because of its scale and the challenges associated with rehabilitating thousands of households within a densely populated urban environment. The programme also forms part of broader efforts to renew ageing housing stock in Mumbai and improve living conditions in long-established residential precincts. 
With possession of the first 500 redeveloped units at Naigaon now set to begin, the project moves into a new phase focused on resident rehabilitation, while construction continues across the remaining portions of the

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