Quoting the East; Mojtaba Khalidpanah, managing director of Tehran’s Industrial and Business Organization Company, announced that the CDI Passage project has been completely eliminated and that the municipality has no plans to implement the project.
According to him, there are several reasons to stop the project that both the mayor of Tehran and some members of the city council have emphasized. The tribes also said in an interview with the East that some legal issues between the municipality and the contractor are currently being pursued.
The project faced opposition from neighboring institutions such as Sina Hospital, National Museum, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and National Library.
In response to the municipality’s efforts to revive the passage, Mehdi Chamran, the head of the Tehran City Council, explicitly criticized the plan in the open court and called it a “false and repetitive” decision. Chamran said:
STIR Street is Street, not shops. If such projects are to be implemented, it must be approved and can be seen in the detailed city plan.
Ahmad Alavi, chairman of the Council’s Tourism and Cultural Heritage Committee, also referred to health and traffic complaints from the area, criticizing the unfulfilled promises of the municipality to revive the street. She said.
Resistance to prevent the project from re -implementing the project is not only by the council and the municipality, but also pressure from external institutions.
The 30th Crossing Project has officially stopped and has now become a legal issue between the municipality and the contractor.
RCO NEWS




