Urban Transformation in Varanasi: Balancing Core Decongestion and Peripheral Expansion through Strategic Planning

Authors

  • shouvonik bala Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, Vidyasagar College for Women, Kolkata, West Bengal, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63671/ijsssr.v3i4.561

Keywords:

Urban growth, Urban transformation, Varanasi city, Master plane, Land use, Smart city mission

Abstract

The city of Varanasi has developed along the banks of the Ganges River. The Ganges River has acted as a focal point on one side, and the city's growth has occurred in a semi-circular direction. One of the world's oldest continuously inhabited urban centres, the city of Varanasi presents a unique challenge in terms of physical planning and growth management due to its complex cultural, religious and morphological structure. Over the centuries, the city has grown organically along the western bank of the Ganges, resulting in a dense, mixed-use urban centre with narrow, unplanned lanes, which contrasts with modern expansion in peripheral areas. The city has a radial development pattern, and areas such as BHU, Mandwadih, Sheopur, and Sarnath have emerged as new growth centres in all directions. Over time, along with the incorporation of many villages and urban settlements, urban development has created irregularly built-up areas along the periphery of the city's central area. The diesel-locomotive works and residential colonies on 250 hectares of land in the southwest and the soda ash factory along GT Road to the east mark the development around the edge of the rural city. Physical planning in Varanasi has historically lacked a comprehensive vision, especially during the colonial and early post-colonial periods, when interventions focused more on civic infrastructure and administrative discipline than on long-term spatial planning. However, in recent decades, the Varanasi Development Authority (VDA) has attempted to implement a structural growth strategy by formulating master plans, zoning regulations, and heritage conservation frameworks.

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Published

2026-03-17

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Urban Transformation in Varanasi: Balancing Core Decongestion and Peripheral Expansion through Strategic Planning. (2026). International Journal of Science and Social Science Research, 3(4), 227-236. https://doi.org/10.63671/ijsssr.v3i4.561

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