Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

To Demolish Or Conserve, Agra Faces Catch-22 Situation

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jun, 2019 07:55 PM

    Agra, a city that is home to three world heritage monuments, including Taj Mahal, is caught in a dilemma between development and conservation.


    The tourism industry wants old structures preserved to attract tourists, but the public demand for better civic amenities call for mass demolition.


    To develop you have to demolish, but heritage conservation requires maintaining the status quo. When every corner of the city has a monument or two, raising its tourism potential, carving out of open spaces for modern projects is neither easy nor permissible under the stringent provisions of the Ancient Monuments Protection Act.


    The state government has announced plan to introduce Metro rail to facilitate mobility within the city. "When the work will start after extensive surveys of two corridors, we expect large-scale demolition in the old city," said Surendra Sharma, President of the Braj Mandal Heritage Conservation Society.


    "Whether the departments concerned will allow or give no-objection certificate for the project, and what measures would be taken to keep the dust level, already touching alarming level, from rising further remains to be seen," he said.


    The ecological fears are real as thousands of trees could be chopped for the project. They are planning the Metro rail depot at the PAC ground, dangerously close to Taj Mahal, says Shravan Kumar Singh, an activist.


    So much environment conservation work is claimed to have been done in the past three decades due to lawyer M.C. Mehta's activism, but the results are not visible. The ground reality paints a dismal picture as both nature and people conspire to hasten the process of decadence in this premier Mughal metropolis.


    River Yamuna is too sick with toxic pollutants and is virtually dead. The air quality continues to remain alarming as an increasing number of vehicles spit noxious gases, fumes and harmful emissions. The suspended particulate matter in the ambient air remains higher than the standard for the eco-sensitive Taj Trapezium Zone, spread over 10,400 sq km. The green cover in the district has come down to a pathetic 6.71 per cent. Compare this with Delhi's 35 per cent and Chandigarh's 45 per cent.

     

    Of the 400 odd community ponds, only a few survive. The irrigation network, an extensive canal system that the British left behind, is mostly encroached upon. The six tributaries of Yamuna in the district remain choked with garbage and sludge round the year.

     

    Over the years, the cumulative impact of various measures initiated has been neutralised by massive construction, concretisation, denudation, urbanisation and substantial increase in the number of vehicles.

     

    Additionally, the Yamuna Expressway and the Agra Lucknow Expressway has resulted in reduction of the green cover and increased road traffic.

     

    City planners are confused whether Agra has to be conserved as a heritage city or to graduate it to a higher level as a smart city.

     

    Many people have suggested that the central government work out some institutional arrangement to prevent conflicting perspectives and action plans.

     

    At present, there is the Mission Management Board, the Taj Trapezium Zone Authority, the central and state pollution control boards, the municipal corporation, the district board and the Agra Development Authority, each with its own set of priorities and levels of accountability. Though no one can claim a clear vision for the city, a hastily compiled voluminous document -- the Agra Heritage Vision -- has been submitted to the Supreme Court and is likely to be adopted soon.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Will Stop India's Share Of Water Flowing To Pakistan, Says Nitin Gadkari:

    After withdrawing the most favoured nation (MFN) status and slamming a 200 per cent import duty, India on Thursday decided to stop the flow of its share of water from the three eastern rivers -- the Beas, Ravi and Sutlej -- to Pakistan.

    Will Stop India's Share Of Water Flowing To Pakistan, Says Nitin Gadkari:

    3 Kashmiri Girls Post Remarks Against Army On Social Media, Institute Takes Action

    3 Kashmiri Girls Post Remarks Against Army On Social Media, Institute Takes Action
    After the deadly Pulwama attack on February 14, these girls allegedly made some adverse and objectionable comments on a Whatsapp group in which other students were also members, the official said.    

    3 Kashmiri Girls Post Remarks Against Army On Social Media, Institute Takes Action

    If Pakistan Can’t Pick Up Masood Azhar, We Will: Capt Amarinder Singh

    Calling Khan “a courtesy ISI prime minister”, Capt Amarinder asked if Khan wanted New Delhi to send the bodies of soldiers as proof of Islamabad’s involvement.

    If Pakistan Can’t Pick Up Masood Azhar, We Will: Capt Amarinder Singh

    Over 2,000 Kashmiri Youth Participate In Army Recruitment Rally

    Braving snowfall and rains, over 2,000 Kashmiri youth participated in an Army recruitment rally in Jammu and Kashmir’s Baramulla district, defence officials said on Wednesday.

    Over 2,000 Kashmiri Youth Participate In Army Recruitment Rally

    Punjab Assembly Resolution Seeks British Govt Apology For Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

    The Punjab Assembly on Wednesday unanimously passed a resolution, seeking an apology from the British government for the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.

    Punjab Assembly Resolution Seeks British Govt Apology For Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

    UK To Reflect On Apology For Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

    The UK government is "reflecting" on demands for a formal apology for the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in April 1919 during the British Raj, a minister told the House of Lords during a debate to mark the centenary of the attack.

    UK To Reflect On Apology For Jallianwala Bagh Massacre