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As Calcutta Times turns 25, we look at 25 places that have transformed over the past two-and-a-half decades. New Town is one of them-a planned township that has grown from barren land into Kolkata’s green smart city.What it was thenIn the early 2000s, New Town was still an engineered landscape in formation. Nearly 30 sq km of lowland had to be raised through large-scale earth-filling, with hundreds of dumpers moving soil daily. “In 2002 it was completely barren , the feeling I remember most is dust everywhere,” recalls Debashis Sen, former chairman of HIDCO, who oversaw multiple phases of the project. Land acquisition across roughly 7,000 acres moved alongside rehabilitation planning, while drainage channels, arterial roads and plot layouts were created almost from scratch. Even then, planning leaned on technology. “GPS-based mapping and CAD systems meant work that might take months or a year was done in weeks,” Sen notes. At the time, New Town existed less as a city than as a development blueprint , infrastructure waiting for life to grow into it.What it is now From 2011 onward, visible development accelerated. Public anchors such as Eco Park, Rabindra Tirtha, Nazrul Tirtha and the skyline-defining Biswa Bangla Gate helped shape its identity. “Old Kolkata had Howrah Bridge or Victoria Memorial, today the Biswa Bangla Gate has become the new Kolkata symbol,” Sen says. The gate itself was a complex build, assembled high above ground and wind-tested with inputs from IIT Kanpur, yet it survived Cyclone Amphan with minimal impact. Large civic infrastructure followed. The Biswa Bangla Convention Centre, designed by architect Dulal Mukherjee, emerged as one of the country’s largest convention venues. Economic growth clustered into zones. The FinTech Hub now houses major financial institutions, while the Bengal Silicon Valley hosts IT campuses and data centres. Three SEZs operate round the clock, and an education belt anchored by Presidency University, Amity University and Netaji Subhas Open University brought a steady student presence. Sen also pushed cultural additions. On the wax museum, he recalls, “When the London original declined Kolkata, We felt hurt, so I decided we would build our own,” leading to the launch of Mother's Wax Museum in 2014. The Educational Hub’s Coffee House, inaugurated in 2020, was similarly intentional. “I wanted students to have a place like College Street’s Coffee House - affordable, welcoming, and full of ideas,” he says, noting its queues even during the pandemic. From 2016, priorities shifted toward sustainability and smart governance. Over 550 CCTVs were linked to an integrated command system, cycle tracks with app-based rentals were introduced, and annual plantation drives, adopted green verges and rapid-growth “Oxygen Walk” forests expanded green cover. These measures helped New Town earn Platinum Green City certification from the Indian Green Building Council. What began as a windswept project site now functions as a full urban ecosystem , shaped not just by planning milestones, but by the everyday rhythms of work, study and public life.Why we love itBecause it actually feels planned - the Action Area grid makes New Town easy to navigate, not a maze you survive daily.
Because work and life sit side by side here: offices, campuses, cafés and parks all within short distances, so the city doesn’t feel split into zones you commute between endlessly.
Because landmarks like Biswa Bangla Gate give it a recognisable skyline - rare for a satellite township.
Because cultural spaces such as Nazrul Tirtha and Rabindra Tirtha make sure it isn’t just glass buildings and office parks.
Because it’s become Kolkata’s new student zone - universities, hostels, coffee spots and addas bring a younger, thinking crowd into the mix.
Because the infrastructure actually feels contemporary: cycle tracks, surveillance grids, command centres and planned green buffers suggest a city built for now, not retrofitted later.
Because venues like the Biswa Bangla Convention Centre pull big national events to this side of town.
Because attractions like Mother's Wax Museum add a fun, tourist-friendly layer to what could otherwise feel too functional.
And most of all, because New Town feels like Kolkata’s future in motion - still growing, still changing, and full of possibility.


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