HomeLatestHyderabad Water Board expands Core Urban Region

Hyderabad Water Board expands Core Urban Region

Hyderabad’s water utility has undertaken a major administrative overhaul as it expands operations to cover the Core Urban Region, appointing a new Joint Managing Director and carving out additional zones to manage the growing metropolitan footprint. The restructuring signals a decisive shift in how the city plans to deliver water supply and sewerage services amid rapid real estate and population growth.

The Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board has widened its jurisdiction beyond earlier municipal limits, bringing peri-urban and high-growth corridors under its direct oversight. To manage the enlarged consumer base, the state government has elevated a senior internal officer as Joint Managing Director and designated three Executive Directors to oversee newly formed Cyberabad, Malkajgiri and Central zones.Senior officials say the expanded leadership structure is intended to decentralise operations, strengthen monitoring and improve response times in newly integrated areas. The move follows sustained urban sprawl across western and northern Hyderabad, where residential layouts, IT parks and high-rise developments have multiplied over the past decade.

Urban infrastructure analysts note that water governance often lags behind land development in fast-growing cities. As new layouts receive building permissions, trunk water lines, sewage networks and treatment capacity must keep pace to prevent tanker dependence and groundwater depletion. By creating dedicated zones, the Board aims to align administrative boundaries with emerging growth clusters.The Cyberabad zone, encompassing much of the IT corridor, is expected to face intense demand from commercial complexes and gated communities. Meanwhile, the Malkajgiri zone includes dense residential neighbourhoods that require upgrades to ageing pipelines and sewerage systems. The Central zone will continue to manage core city networks and treatment infrastructure.Officials indicate that the restructuring will also support faster execution of capital works, including network augmentation, reservoir construction and sewage treatment plant upgrades. Hyderabad’s expanding urban periphery has increased the pressure on bulk water sources and downstream ecosystems, making efficient distribution and wastewater management critical for long-term sustainability.

Water sector experts argue that as Hyderabad integrates peripheral settlements into formal governance frameworks, service equity must remain central. Newly added areas often lack underground drainage, stormwater systems and reliable piped water connections. Without timely investment, disparities between established and emerging neighbourhoods can widen.The Board’s reorganisation comes at a time when climate variability and erratic rainfall patterns are placing additional strain on urban utilities. Strengthening metering, reducing non-revenue water and promoting wastewater recycling are likely to be key priorities under the expanded mandate.For the real estate sector, the clearer administrative structure may bring greater predictability in approvals and service provisioning. However, planners caution that infrastructure expansion must be synchronised with sustainable resource management to avoid over-extraction and long-term supply risks.As Hyderabad continues its transformation into a multi-nodal metropolis, the effectiveness of this institutional reset will be measured by whether residents across the Core Urban Region receive reliable, safe and environmentally responsible water services.

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Hyderabad Water Board expands Core Urban Region