Residents of Sector 4, one of Gurugram's oldest residential sectors once celebrated as a model neighbourhood, have voiced growing frustration over persistent civic issues, including severe dust pollution, overflowing sewage during monsoons, clogged drains, garbage accumulation, broken or missing footpaths, vendor encroachments, and illegal parking that exacerbates congestion. Long-time inhabitants describe a marked deterioration in living conditions, transforming wide, clean roads and well-kept parks into areas plagued by health hazards and daily inconveniences.
Veteran resident Vinod Behl, who has lived in the sector since the 1980s, blamed the decline on shifting administrative priorities toward real estate development at the expense of public infrastructure. He highlighted infrequent sanitation worker appearances, inadequate supervision of contractors by the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG), and vacant plots turned into illegal dumping grounds. Another resident, Parveen Mishra, pointed to dust buildup along recently repaired roads and ongoing health risks from open garbage despite repeated complaints.
Ward councillor Prashant Bhardwaj confirmed a critical manpower shortage, noting that the sector needs 138 sanitation workers but has only around 50 deployed since April 2025, with delays in tender processes hindering recruitment. MCG officials maintained that door-to-door waste collection continues via assigned trucks, attributing some roadside litter to improper resident disposal, and pledged to resolve pending grievances promptly.
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Concerns extend to pedestrian safety, with residents like Manoj Bhardwaj from the Urban Estate Residents Welfare Association criticising encroached or nonexistent footpaths, particularly near markets and Dhanwapur areas, making walking hazardous for seniors. Parvesh Sharma echoed these sentiments, noting that newly constructed roads often lack footpaths altogether, while the councillor cited narrow road widths as a barrier to new constructions.
Drainage and sewage problems remain chronic, with outdated infrastructure failing to cope with population growth, leading to annual flooding and water entering homes. A junior MCG official announced that a tender for the mechanised cleaning of drains and sewage lines has been issued, with work expected to commence by the end of December 2025.
Illegal parking in internal lanes has further intensified traffic chaos, prompting police to issue challans and urge Resident Welfare Associations to designate parking zones. These multifaceted challenges in Sector 4 reflect broader strains on Gurugram's civic services amid rapid urbanisation, underscoring the need for enhanced enforcement, manpower, and infrastructure upgrades.
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