Navi Mumbai has taken a notable step towards integrating food systems into urban planning with the operationalisation of its first formal urban agriculture centre in Kharghar. Developed on land traditionally restricted from construction, the initiative reflects a broader shift in how planned cities are rethinking underutilised spaces to improve environmental resilience and community engagement.
The centre has been established on a parcel located beneath high-tension transmission lines, in line with planning guidelines adopted by City and Industrial Development Corporation to earmark such corridors for green and non-built uses. Urban planners say this approach not only reduces safety risks associated with development near power infrastructure but also creates continuous green buffers within dense residential zones. Situated in Sector 5 of Kharghar, the land was originally allocated more than a decade ago for a modest nursery and agricultural information facility. Over time, consistent public participation transformed the site into a functional city-farming hub, drawing residents interested in saplings, kitchen gardening and small-scale cultivation techniques. The project has now entered a more institutional phase through a formal collaboration with Dr Balasaheb Sawant Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth. The partnership is intended to expand training, research outreach and awareness programmes focused on agriculture within urban and peri-urban settings across the Mumbai Metropolitan Region.
According to officials associated with the initiative, the centre will host practical demonstrations, short-term courses and exposure visits covering natural farming practices, urban horticulture and micro agri-enterprise models. The target audience extends beyond traditional farmers to include apartment residents, students and aspiring entrepreneurs seeking locally adaptable food-production skills. Urban development experts note that such facilities can play a strategic role in climate adaptation. City-level farming contributes to heat mitigation, improved soil health and biodiversity retention while strengthening local food access. In planned cities like Navi Mumbai, where land-use zoning is relatively structured, integrating agriculture into non-developable parcels offers a scalable model for greener neighbourhoods. The presence of active green-use projects is also beginning to influence residential planning outcomes. Real estate analysts say that neighbourhoods with accessible open spaces and community-driven environmental assets tend to score higher on liveability metrics, particularly among families and long-term homebuyers. In nodes such as Kharghar, this can subtly reshape how value is perceived beyond built density alone. Not all responses to the initiative have been uniformly positive. Some citizen groups have raised concerns about public access under high-voltage corridors. Planning authorities, however, maintain that controlled green use aligns with safety norms and prevents encroachment or illegal construction on sensitive land.
As interest in local food systems and climate-conscious urban living grows, the Kharghar centre is emerging as a working demonstration of how planned cities can repurpose leftover infrastructure land into productive, educational and community-oriented spaces. The coming years will determine whether similar models are replicated across Navi Mumbai’s other planned nodes.
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