YEIDA has cancelled the building map of Supertech's first phase of the 100-acre township project 'Upcountry', saying it was submitted as per the building bye laws of 2010, which provided for 40 per cent of ground coverage.
According to YEIDA, the map should have been according the 2009 building bye laws which allow only 25 per cent of ground coverage.
Apparently, the building plan was initially approved in 2011 on the basis of a recommendatory letter purportedly from a senior Uttar Pradesh government official, whose authenticity has come into question and the matter is being probed.
"The building map for part completion of the project has been cancelled," YEIDA CEO Arun Vir Singh told PTI.
"The building map submitted by Supertech in October 2015 was not as per the Uttar Pradesh government's building bye laws of 2009," he said.
The CEO said the Authority had received a letter in 2011, purportedly signed by Alok Kumar, Secretary, Industrial Development in the Uttar Pradesh government, recommending that the benefit of building bye laws of 2010 be given to Supertech as construction work had not started in the project.
Supertech Chairman R K Arora said the plot was allotted in
June 2010 and was registered in August 2010.
"We applied for building plan approval and it was sanctioned in October 2011 as per the 2010 building bye laws regulation.
"When we applied for completion certificate last year, at that time the authority said the approval had been given wrongly. We were told to revise the building plan as per 2009 bye laws," Arora said.
"We are in no way connected with this letter. This is between the two departments," Arora said.
He said the company has approached the government to resolve the matter.
Last month, Supertech was asked to seal over 1,000 units at a housing project in Greater Noida by local authority GNIDA for allegedly constructing them without approval.
In April 2014, the Allahabad High Court had ordered demolition of the company's two 40-storey towers in a Noida housing project. Supertech has challenged the order in the apex court.
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