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Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate Kartavya Bhavan on August 6, 2025, in New Delhi, marking a pivotal step in India’s ongoing administrative revamp under the Central Vista transformation project. The new building, situated along Kartavya Path, will serve as the home for major ministries and is set to streamline the nation’s governance apparatus for decades to come.
The Project in Focus
Kartavya Bhavan-3 is the first in a planned series of ten state-of-the-art Common Central Secretariat buildings that will eventually consolidate the government’s dispersed ministries and departments.
The complex will house the Ministries of Home Affairs (MHA), External Affairs (MEA), Rural Development, MSME, Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), Petroleum & Natural Gas, and the Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser.
The inauguration addresses a long-standing need to move critical ministries out of aging and inefficient structures such as North Block, South Block, and mid-20th-century administrative buildings scattered across the capital.
Architectural and Environmental Features
The facility covers roughly 1.5 lakh square meters spread across seven stories and two basements, designed for maximum operational efficiency and sustainability.
Kartavya Bhavan is equipped with modern security features — including ID card-based access, electronic surveillance, and a centralized command system — as well as IT-ready, future-proof workspaces.
Prioritizing green infrastructure, the building uses 30 percent less energy than earlier designs, aided by special glass façades to minimize heat and noise, over 5.34 lakh units of solar-generated electricity annually, advanced HVAC systems, and energy-saving lighting and lifts.
Solar water heating systems will meet a quarter of the daily hot water needs, and the site includes rainwater harvesting systems, zero-discharge waste facilities, and electric vehicle charging stations.
Administrative Reform and Rationale
Kartavya Bhavan’s commissioning is integral to India’s broader administrative reform agenda. By bringing diverse ministries together under one roof, the new secretariat is set to improve inter-ministerial coordination, reduce red tape, and accelerate policy implementation.
Amalgamating government bodies from scattered, rented, and obsolete premises is expected to save the public exchequer nearly Rs 1,000 crore in annual costs, while also sharply reducing maintenance overheads.
Employees will benefit from improved working conditions, accessibility, and health and well-being initiatives.
Central Vista and the Government’s Vision
This inauguration follows recent landmarks such as the new Parliament building, Vice President’s enclave, and the revamped three-kilometre Kartavya Path, all central elements of the ₹20,000 crore Central Vista master plan.
The move symbolizes the government’s commitment to modern and citizen-centric governance, signalling an era of architectural pride and administrative efficiency with a focus on environmental responsibility.
What’s Next
The shift of key ministries to Kartavya Bhavan will free up Raisina Hill’s historic North and South Blocks for conversion into the Yuge Yugeen Bharat Museum, in line with PM Modi’s vision of a vibrant, accessible cultural and administrative district.
Additional Kartavya Bhawans are slated for completion over the next year, eventually bringing together all central government departments for seamless collaboration.
Source: Times of India, Tribune India, Hindustan Times, India Today, PIB, UNI, and Newsband