A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice Anu Malhotra said the inspection reports of IIT Delhi and the Central Public Works Department (CPWD) be placed before the secretary for further consideration who will be at liberty to decide if testing and inspection of the premises, housing the 55-year-old library branch at Karol Bagh, was necessary.
It said this exercise should be done as soon as possible and the secretary should also grant opportunity to the parties concerned before taking the final decision.
The court also said its interim order restraining the North Delhi Municipal Corporation (NDMC) from demolishing the building would continue.
The court noted the issue is that partial demolition has been effected and it needs to be examined how unsafe the building is.
During the hearing, the owner of the premises, Dimple Enterprises, proposed that he was ready to pay market price for reopening the library on any government land.
The counsel appearing for the Delhi Library Board said it was the biggest library chain and they wished to open the branch as early as possible.
The court was hearing a petition filed by some scholars and journalists, who have moved against the corporation's two notices to DPL to vacate the premises claiming that the building was structurally unfit and dangerous.
The court had earlier stopped the NDMC from taking any further step, saying the library "shall be kept closed and nobody shall be permitted to enter the premises till further order".
The first notice was issued to the library on September 15 last year and the next one on November 4, asking it to vacate the premises so that the building could be demolished.
Seeking quashing of the notices, the petitioners have alleged that the owner of the premises, Dimple Enterprises, "wants a commercial complex to come up in place of this library in order to make money from this land".
Stating that there was "no likelihood of immediate danger to passers-by or others while entering the premises," the petitioners have sought appointment of a court commissioner "to inspect, evaluate and analyse the current status and condition of the library".
They have also sought a direction to "initiate enquiry against the NDMC officials concerned and the chairman/defaulting officials concerned of the Delhi Library Board or DPL".
The first Delhi Public Library was started by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru across the old Delhi railway station in 1951.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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