e-Bhoomi portal launched | Haryana’s 1.7-L acre infra blueprint: Land push reshapes urban landscape

SHARE:

Haryana is entering a phase of large-scale restructuring, with its infrastructure planning now heavily anchored in a massive land aggregation exercise spanning cities, industrial hubs, and transport corridors.

According to consolidated data from the state’s e-Bhoomi portal (ebhoomi.jamabandi.nic.in) and departmental proposals, multiple agencies — including the Haryana Shahari Vikas Pradhikaran (HSVP), Haryana State Industrial and Infrastructure Development Corporation (HSIIDC), Urban Local Bodies, and Transport Department — are collectively driving one of the most extensive land requirement pipelines across the state.

At the centre of this transformation is an estimated total land requirement of around 1.7 lakh acres earmarked for planned urban expansion, industrial estates, logistics infrastructure, and institutional development across Haryana.

This includes CM Nayab Singh Saini’s budget announcement of creating around 849 sectors (residential, commercial & industrial) in 69 cities across the state. This land expansion strategy is not isolated but structured around a long-term vision of making Haryana a three-pillar growth state: industrial manufacturing base, logistics hub for North India, and satellite urbanisation zone for the National Capital Region (NCR).

The e-Bhoomi portal of Haryana allows landowners to voluntarily register and participate in planned development, reducing legal disputes and improving transparency in land transactions. Officials said, “Haryana is also working toward integrating land pooling, digital mapping, and GIS-based planning systems, ensuring better alignment between infrastructure demand and agricultural land conversion”.

Urban Local Bodies minister Vipul Goel said, “The news sectors in Haryana shall be developed under planned urban expansion. It will curtail development of unregularised/ illegal colonies and people will get residential as well as commercial and industrial sectors equipped with all the basic amenities.”

The largest share of land demand is being driven by the Haryana Shahari Vikas Pradhikaran (HSVP), which is spearheading planned urban sector development in high-growth districts. In Gurugram alone, approximately 17,358 acres spread across nearly 36 villages have been identified for new urban sectors, reflecting the scale of expansion around India’s leading corporate and services hub. Officials say that “this expansion is designed to relieve pressure on existing sectors while creating new residential, commercial, and institutional districts.”

Leave a Comment