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Ltd (NMDPL)—80 per cent of which is controlled by Adani Properties and 20 per cent by the Maharashtra government—the Dharavi ...
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Photo feature | Inside Dharavi
Every city has an underbelly. Dharavi is Mumbai's pulsating gut, teeming with life in a visceral testament to the human will ...
The DRP helpline has emerged as a crucial tool for communication, allowing residents to ask questions, resolve doubts, and ...
SVR SRINIVAS, the CEO of Dharavi Redevelopment Project, speaks to The Free Press Journal's Editor S BALAKRISHNAN about the ...
As the survey phase of the Dharavi Redevelopment Project concludes, increased calls to the toll-free helpline indicate residents' eagerness to participate. With 41% of queries concerning eligibility ...
In the last month, the Dharavi Redevelopment Project helpline has received nearly 700 enquiries, with many seeking ...
As the survey phase of the Dharavi Redevelopment Project (DRP) comes to an end, a significant number of residents, who had ...
Dharavi Redevelopment Project (DRP) officials said that of 700 calls received in the past month, nearly 41% enquiries were related to requests to complete door-to-door/household survey, a step in the ...
Residents say it will be death sentence to move to Mumbai’s fringe areas where garbage and waste is dumped or treated.
The lanes of Dharavi are long and winding. Spread over roughly 500 acres in the heart of Mumbai, they connect the shanties of this informal settlement, home to about one million people.
At Dharavi, between 750,000 and a million people live in an area of 1 sq. mile, i.e. the size of New York’s Central Park or 1/3 that of London’s Hyde Park.