Abstract:
Commercial areas in developing countries and specially India, constitute an
integral part of the local economy as well as exhibit ethnic image of the habitat.
Commercial areas in demographic settings as high as Delhi attracts large number
of buyers and sellers. Recent changes in the national economy like liberalization
of the economy, entry of multinational companies in the consumer sector and
globalization, improved telecommunication system, increased per capita income
and the purchasing power of the people, have brought about changes in the pattern
of retail behaviour by the consumers.
Delhi Master Plan-2021 envisages a five-tier system of commercial areas to
accommodate required shopping, commercial office and other service activities
like cinema, hotel and restaurant and various community services and facilities in
an integrated manner. The five-tier system has at different levels, the Metropolitan
city centre, District centre, Community centre, and Local shopping centre and
Convenience shopping centre. On the third level is the community centre which is
a government owned land, where community facilities are provided catering to a
population of about one lakh with a minimum area of four hectares. In Delhi, there
are different types of community centres where there are different activities
(namely, retail, offices and banks, repair and services, banquet halls, markets,
hotels, Cineplex, etc.) which dominate the community centres. The most common
and dominant in South Delhi is the community centre whose primary identity is of
a marketplace. The study is limited to the community centres which are primarily
marketplaces and are presently underutilized and transforming to a derelict land.
There is a trend of strong transformations on commercial and public and semipublic
premises on the artery of the F-zone of south Delhi, where the function and
use is being redefined to revitalize the area. The boost towards the redefining of
obsolete urban functions with new ones is the key aspect for redevelopment of
areas. As part of the present study, different models of redevelopment are studied
where there are different strategies to different models. The inferences from these
models are then compared to the existing model of a selected pilot communi ty
centre, the Basant lok community centre. A detailed analysis of the pilot communi tycentre is undertaken on the following parameters. The trend and causes of the
decline and transformation of the community centre is explored. The occupancy
and infrastructure of the precinct is documented and analysed. It is seen that there
are 40% vacant shops in the community centre and hence there is a need to
redefine their role. The catchment characteristics conveys that the area is a highend
residential area and it passes through the outer ring road of Delhi. For the
catchment areas, a need analysis is done to understand the frequency of visit of
residents to the community centre and other commercial areas. It is understood
that the facilities in the community centre are less and hence is not preferred by
people in the catchment. These inferences brings us to the point that there is a
transformation seen in the area and redevelopment is needed to redefine the role.
For redevelopment there is a need to see the perspective of residents and the
developer, as any project would need to be socially acceptable and economically
viable. To balance between the needs of residents and developers, tenure
diversification as a strategy of ‘regeneration’ is used to bring in diverse options to
fill in residents need and developers’ needs. To achieve the profitable value, but
also addressing the social needs of residents, the strategy of tenure diversification
is used, where a use of higher end is incorporated to gain profit and cross-subsidise
the social uses. Through the pilot study, the work attempts to put forward a socially
acceptable and economically viable model of redevelopment of communi ty
centres, restoring the vibrancy of the precinct and serving the community in the
vicinity.