Dholera Master Plan Explained: Sectors, Zones, and Land Use
આ લેખ હાલમાં ફક્ત અંગ્રેજીમાં ઉપલબ્ધ છે.
Most Dholera content online talks about TP1, TP2, and TP3 as if they’re the whole story. They’re not — they’re just the first schemes to move through approval within a much larger master plan. If you’re evaluating a long-term investment here, it’s worth understanding the shape of that larger plan, not just the zone your plot happens to sit in.
The scale of the plan
Dholera Special Investment Region (DSIR) is one of the largest greenfield planned regions under the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) initiative, spanning a large multi-village area in Ahmedabad district, Gujarat. The scale matters because it’s the reason development is happening zone-by-zone through sequential Town Planning schemes rather than all at once — no single phase of construction was ever going to cover an area this size in one go.
How land use is organized
The master plan broadly separates land into a few functional categories:
- Industrial zones, positioned to take advantage of DMIC connectivity and anchor investments like the Tata Electronics semiconductor project.
- Residential zones, including the areas covered by TP1, TP2, and TP3, meant to house the workforce and families drawn by industrial and commercial growth.
- Commercial and mixed-use zones, planned around anticipated economic activity hubs.
- Reserved land for infrastructure and green space, including road networks, utility corridors, and parks — a meaningful share of total land is set aside for this rather than sold as private plots.
Why “which TP scheme” isn’t the only question
Because the master plan sequences development, a plot’s value proposition depends on more than just its TP number. Two questions matter alongside it:
- What’s the zone’s designated land use? A residential plot in a zone bordering planned industrial development has a different long-term character than one in a purely residential pocket.
- How does the zone connect to core infrastructure? Proximity to the Ahmedabad-Dholera expressway, planned transit corridors, and utility trunk lines affects both livability and long-term value — independent of which TP number is attached.
The practical takeaway
When someone pitches you a plot, ask where it sits within the master plan’s land-use map, not just which TP scheme number it carries. A plot deep in a scheme with strong access and unambiguous residential zoning is a different proposition from one on the edge of an industrial buffer zone, even if both happen to be labeled the same TP number. This is exactly the kind of detail a good independent advisor should walk you through before you commit — not something to take on faith from whoever is selling the plot.