Jaipur made it to the select list of smart cities -- balancing the old and the new -- six months after Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the project on June 25, 2015.
Officials here said before the year-end, Jaipur would have completed much of its heritage restoration work.
The area-based development is being executed by the Jaipur Smart City Limited (JSCL), formed on March 12, 2016. An amount of Rs 483.65 crore has been earmarked for promoting heritage and tourism in the city under the mission.
The Union urban development ministry has approved investments worth Rs 2,401 crore for Jaipur under the smart city project, which will also include facilities for multi- modal mobility, smart solid waste management, wifi network in some areas and high-tech classrooms.
Jaipur, built in 1728 AD by Maharaja Jai Singh, earned its moniker 'pink city' in 1853, when the city was painted pink in honour of a visit by the Prince of Wales during the reign of Sawai Ram Singh. Pink was considered the colour of hospitality.
Over the years, these iconic markets have been encroached upon. Facades have been damaged, and what was once picturesque is now an ungainly sight of hanging cables, unkempt vegetation and extension of shops.
"We want to revive the lost beauty of the Pink City and will do this by repairing the damage, removing the clutter and repainting the facade with the original colour. We want to preserve the fabric and character of the walled city," said Singh, who is also principal secretary, local self government.
"We are likely to complete this by June 2018," said the smart city project conservation architect Kavita Jain.
Another major work being done, at a cost of Rs 1.8 crore, is the restoration and "adaptive re-use" of the historical Rajasthan School of Arts, the state's oldest institution promoting art and culture, set up by Sawai Ram Singh in 1857.
"This structure has deteriorated because of exposure to climatic conditions. We intend to conserve it and open it as an indigenous art museum," Singh said. The renovation will keep its original "character", while restoring the building in association with the Department of Archaeology and Museum.
Another project is the rejuvenation of bawris, stepwells traditionally used as storage and irrigation tanks.
"We want to restore the lost beauty and functionality of the bawris which will improve the water table of Jaipur as well as help in conserving heritage structures of rainwater harvesting," Singh said about the Rs 4.37-crore project.
Twelve other projects under the mission include turning heritage structures of Jaleb Chowk into an art square and of the Old Town Hall into a city museum and cleaning the Talkatora Lake.
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