Without fast, reliable and integrated public transport systems, dependence on private vehicles is likely to increase steadily over time, creating long-term pressures on roads, commuting efficiency, logistics costs and air quality.
By Desh Raj Singh
As commercial operations begin at Noida International Airport, western Uttar Pradesh is preparing for one of the most significant urban and economic transitions witnessed in National Capital Region (NCR) in recent decades. The Jewar airport is expected to reshape investment patterns, logistics networks, real estate activity and regional mobility across a large part of western Uttar Pradesh.
But while the airport may emerge as the most visible symbol of this transformation, the larger challenge lies elsewhere.
Can Jewar expand economically without repeating the infrastructure and planning gaps already visible across several NCR urban corridors?
This question assumes significance because NCR has already experienced the long-term consequences of urban expansion moving faster than public infrastructure creation.
Over the past decade, Greater Noida West evolved into one of the region’s fastest-growing residential clusters. Large-scale housing development transformed the area into a major urban corridor within a relatively short period of time. Yet transport systems, road capacity and integrated mobility infrastructure struggled to keep pace with population growth and rising commuting demand.
Even today, a substantial section of residents continues to depend heavily on road-based transportation because metro connectivity and integrated public transit systems remain limited relative to the scale of urban expansion. The result is increasingly visible across the region: longer commute times, mounting traffic pressure, rising dependence on private vehicles and growing stress on civic infrastructure.
Urban growth cannot remain sustainable if mobility systems evolve significantly slower than habitation itself.
Public Transport Must Shape Urbanisation
Jewar still possesses the advantage of planning ahead before urban pressures become difficult to reverse.
This is precisely why transport infrastructure must develop simultaneously with residential and commercial expansion rather than emerge as a delayed corrective response. Metro connectivity, regional rapid transit systems, electric bus networks and last-mile mobility infrastructure need to become foundational elements of regional planning from the outset.
Public transport cannot remain an afterthought to urbanisation. It must shape urbanisation itself.
The issue becomes even more important because Jewar is located farther from Delhi and several existing NCR economic centres compared to other urban clusters in the region. Without fast, reliable and integrated public transport systems, dependence on private vehicles is likely to increase steadily over time, creating long-term pressures on roads, commuting efficiency, logistics costs and air quality.
Development, however, cannot be measured solely through large announcements or high-visibility infrastructure projects.
The quality of urbanisation ultimately depends on everyday public systems: mobility, healthcare access, schools, water availability, civic infrastructure and public spaces. If these systems expand only after dense habitation takes shape, urban growth risks becoming fragmented, reactive and increasingly expensive to manage.
An Opportunity to Shape Growth
The NCR has already witnessed how difficult infrastructure correction becomes once large-scale population concentration outpaces planning capacity.
At the same time, the region’s rural and agricultural foundations should not disappear beneath unchecked urban expansion. Economic transformation must remain balanced with environmental sustainability, groundwater protection and the long-term interests of local communities whose livelihoods shaped the region for decades before large-scale urbanisation began.
This balance will become critical as industrial corridors, logistics parks and residential projects continue expanding around the airport ecosystem.
Jewar today stands at a relatively rare stage in India’s urban development journey. Unlike older metropolitan clusters already struggling with congestion, infrastructure stress and unplanned density, it still retains an opportunity to shape growth before those pressures become deeply embedded.
The broader lesson from NCR is already clear. Cities become significantly harder to manage when infrastructure begins responding to urbanisation instead of guiding it.
The airport runway may be nearing completion.
The larger challenge now lies in ensuring that planning, mobility systems and public infrastructure are prepared to grow alongside it.
Desh Raj Singh is a social development professional and is a keen observer of urban development.

