City maidans must not be perks for a few
Delhi High Court's strong comments highlight the critical value of city open spaces. These green areas are essential for clean air and ecological resilience. Exclusive clubs' green cover benefits everyone. India needs more public parks like London...

Clubs and institutions are exclusive spaces, their facilities and grounds open only to members. Yet, ecological benefits of green cover of many of these places are not confined within their walls. Open spaces provide environmental services that extend well beyond club precincts. But India can't stop at having such enclaves as accidental providers of urban greenery. Every citizen should have access to expansive, free public spaces comparable to London's Hyde Park, New York's Central Park, or even Kolkata's Maidan and Mumbai's Shivaji Park. Even (read: especially) in space-starved cities, public commons should not be luxuries but essential infrastructure. Ecologist Harini Nagendra's research on Bengaluru's lakes, parks and neighbourhood greens tells us that urban commons also strengthen ecological resilience and social cohesion. Her work shows how citizens collectively restoring and managing shared spaces foster trust, belonging and civic participation across classes and communities.
As India urbanises rapidly, we can either continue treating open spaces as vacant land awaiting commercial use, or recognise them as indispensable public goods. The right to clean air, expanses - and grass - can't remain privileges for a few. Open spaces must be embedded in the very design of our cities.
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