When Debabrata Dutta, a senior technical manager with Wipro Technologies, and wife Arunima finally settled down in Kolkata — after postings in the US and Bangalore — what they wanted was a home that combined the luxury of a bungalow with the security of a housing complex. They got both, with a bonus: being part of India’s first solar housing project.
Today, the couple are the proud owners of a “dream house” in Rabirashmi Abasan — christened thus by Chief Minister Buddadeb Bhattacharjee himself, for rabirashmi means sunrays.
The housing complex comprises 25 plush bungalows priced at Rs 43 lakh to Rs 45 lakh each for a built-up space of 1,700 sq ft. As Arunima says, they don’t mind paying extra for the “green” bonus.
The brainchild of the West Bengal Renewable Energy Development Agency (WBREDA), Rabirashmi has been developed on a 1.76-acre plot in New Town Kolkata by Bengal DCL — a joint venture of the West Bengal Housing Board and Development Consultants Ltd. The construction was undertaken by Mackintosh Burn.
What is interesting is that it is perhaps the first project in the country where residents push power — generated in their rooftop solar photovoltaic panels — into the grid of power utilities. If they are “power surplus”, they can supply it to the state power utilities and the balance is adjusted to their total consumption of electricity. In this “net metering concept”, consumers pay only for the net energy consumption (calculated on how much they consume from power utilities and how much they push into the grid).
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