The Delhi Real Estate Regulator has revoked the order that prevented the registration of properties
The action was done on November 28, after Lieutenant Governor VK Saxena met with Delhi RERA Chairman Anand Kumar at Raj Niwas and asked him to reevaluate the directive.
The order that has stopped property registrations in the city since it was issued has been rescinded by the Delhi Real Estate Regulatory Authority (Delhi RERA), according to RERA officials.
The action was done on November 28, after Lieutenant Governor VK Saxena met with Delhi RERA Chairman Anand Kumar at Raj Niwas and asked him to reevaluate the directive.
All sub-registrars have been instructed by Delhi RERA not to register any new properties that do not adhere to the Unified Building Bylaws (UBBL) for Delhi, 2016's maximum number of dwelling units allowed on a given plot size. Are.
In addition, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) and other municipal authorities were instructed by the real estate regulator to refrain from approving construction designs that exceed the maximum number of dwelling units allowed by the plot size in its ruling dated September 11, 2023.
Sub-registrars all around the city have totally ceased registering properties as a result of our instruction, which has caused some uncertainty. We didn't want to cause the broader public any issues. The decision was rescinded to make sure the public is not harmed, Delhi RERA Chairman Anand Kumar told Moneycontrol.
He promised to provide a supplemental explanation of the September order shortly as well.
In its September ruling, Delhi RERA noted that construction designs with extra dwelling units constructed with a pantry or store but no kitchen were not being approved by local agencies such as MCD, Delhi Development Authority, New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC), and Delhi Cantonment Board. are donating. RERA has noted that builders circumvent Supreme Court directives by converting pantries and shops into kitchens after construction plans are approved and selling the units as independent dwelling units.
The Delhi RERA decision required the relevant authorities to abide by the 2008 ruling of the Supreme Court, which set a maximum quantity of dwelling units that may be constructed on various plot sizes.
Sub-registrar offices in Delhi have ceased registering new properties in the wake of the RERA order, which was received by the registrar office on November 17.
According to the Delhi RERA ruling, the number of dwelling units was limited to merely three or four square meters for plots up to fifty square meters, in accordance with the Unified Building Bylaws, 2016 and the Supreme Court judgment of March 14, 2008. Was. When the land size exceeded 50–250 square meters. The decree also set a cap on how many residential units might be built on other sites larger than 3,750 square meters. The decree also set a cap on how many residential units might be built on other sites larger than 3,750 square meters.
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