IHSDP Scheme
The IHSDP scheme (Integrated Housing and Slum Development Programmes)
has been introduced by the Government of India for the purpose of slum improvement in cities
and towns under the JNNURM (Jawaharlal Nehru Urban Renewal Mission). The critical objective
of the IHSDP scheme is to strive for holistic slum development with a healthy and enabling
urban environment by providing adequate shelter and basic infrastructure facilities to the
slum dwellers of the identified urban areas.
Sangli-Miraj-Kupwad is a small municipal corporation in the state of
Maharashtra about 400 kms south of Mumbai on the banks of the river Krishna and covers an
area of 118 sq.kms. The population of this city was close to 5 lakhs according to the census
of 2001. The city appointed SA as consultants to submit a proposal to the Government of
India in February 2009 under the IHSDP scheme for the rehabilitation of almost half its slum
population covering 29 slums across the city into an integrated housing and infrastructure
scheme. The unique feature of this proposal was its citywide perspective for slum improvement
and development using remote sensing technology and GIS software. 22 slums will have to be
relocated, as they were either along roads that were to be widened or had other reservations
on them. SA was able to plan out their relocation to neighboring sites within 2-2.5 kms of
their existing place of occupation. This planned approach with great consideration for
'origins and destinations' for slums to be relocated ensured that this did not take the
communities far away from their current places of work or other social amenities like school,
markets, etc. There were seven sites identified owned by the SMKMC which already have slums
on them. SA designed 'walk-up' social housing, which would rehabilitate the existing dwellers
on the site as well as create an extra housing stock that could absorb the neighboring slums
that had to be relocated. The GOI approved this project as a special case for its innovative,
holistic and inclusive citywide approach using technology, which was potentially replicable
in other cities that could emulate this approach towards making their cities 'slum free'.