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Meet the man who ensured Panchkula met Tricity’s lofty standards
India
News

Meet the man who ensured Panchkula met Tricity’s lofty standards

TH
The Indian Express
about 2 hours ago
Edited ByGlobal AI News Editorial Team
Reviewed BySenior Editor
Published
Dec 29, 2025

At 79, this retired assistant director has become Panchkula’s quiet architect, piecing it together through sheer grit and smart advocacy. (Express Photo)

Back in 1987, when S K Nayyar unlocked his new home in Panchkula, it was no polished satellite city. It felt like a dusty kasba, cut off from Chandigarh with no smooth roads, no streetlights piercing the nights, and none of the basics like schools or even a gas agency. Most folks would have grumbled or packed up for Chandigarh’s comforts. But Nayyar, then an official at the Bhakra Beas Management Board, saw a raw canvas begging for action.

Nayyar wouldn’t settle for Panchkula as a mere sub-division. In 1991, they pushed for and won that status. Then he led 45 citizens to meet then Chief Minister Bhajan Lal, demanding full district hood. They got it. From there, victories piled up. They petitioned the high court for local courts, secured land for four post offices, and a big one in Sector 8. When Chandigarh tried to axe metro plans at the IT Park, Nayyar stepped in to extend lines to Sectors 21 and 25. Even in 2015, he cornered then Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar at an open darbar to lock in land for a medical college in Sector 32.

Three awards from the Panchkula administration (1992, 2007, 2013) sit as trophies, but ego clashes and stalled projects never dimmed his fire. “Inner consciousness drove me,” he says, crediting a middle-class upbringing and a father who lived for others. Now he turns to the young. “Every youth in Panchkula should pitch in. A few hours a week can transform a neighborhood.”

Nayyar didn’t just live in Panchkula. He built its soul, proving cities rise not from concrete alone, but from people who step up and stay the course.

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The Indian Express