The Sindh High Court has formally intervened in the ongoing commercial development at Hill Park, issuing notices to the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC) and local authorities. The court’s move follows a petition challenging the conversion of protected park land into commercial zones, an issue that has sparked public outcry among residents and urban planning advocates.
For years, Hill Park stood as one of the few remaining green lungs in a city increasingly defined by concrete sprawl. The petition argues that the current construction violates original land-use mandates, which strictly prohibited commercial activity within the park’s boundaries. Residents claim that the sudden appearance of heavy machinery and structural foundations is a direct threat to the city’s environmental health.
“We aren’t just losing trees; we are losing a public utility that belongs to the citizens of Karachi,” the lead petitioner stated during Tuesday’s hearing.
The KMC has maintained that the project is part of a broader “beautification” initiative, yet officials struggled to produce documentation during the proceedings that justified the commercial nature of the structures. The bench, led by Justice Zafar Ahmed Rajput, has demanded a detailed report from the municipal authorities by the next hearing, specifically asking for the original master plan of the site.
The stakes go beyond a single park. Karachi’s urban landscape has been systematically eroded by similar projects, where public amenities are repurposed for private gain under the guise of development. Urban planners have long warned that the city’s drainage and ventilation systems are failing because of this exact pattern of unchecked construction.
The court’s decision to freeze further development until the next hearing provides a temporary reprieve. However, for the activists gathered outside the court, the legal battle is only the beginning. They are demanding a transparent audit of all land allocations made in the area over the last decade.
The KMC is expected to file its response by the end of the week, but until the court reviews the site’s zoning history, the excavators at Hill Park remain idle. The city’s residents are now waiting to see if the judiciary will prioritize environmental preservation over the commercial interests that have dominated Karachi’s urban planning for years.
