Vacancy Circular No: A-11013/1/2015-DDII
Delhi Urban Art Commission (DUAC) Secretary Recruitment 2025. Advertisement for the post of Secretary in Delhi Urban Art Commission (DUAC). Candidates are advised to read the details and eligibility criteria mentioned below for this vacancy. Candidates must check their eligibility, i.e., educational qualification, age limit, experience and etc. The eligible candidates can submit their applications directly before 10th December 2025. Candidates can check the latest Delhi Urban Art Commission (DUAC) Recruitment 2025 Secretary Vacancy 2025 details and apply online at the duac.org.in recruitment 2025 page.
Delhi Urban Art Commission (DUAC) Recruitment Notification & Recruitment application form is available @ duac.org.in. Delhi Urban Art Commission (DUAC). Selection will be done on the basis of test/interview, and shortlisted candidates will be appointed in Delhi. More details of duac.org.in recruitment, new vacancy, upcoming notices, syllabus, answer key, merit list, selection list, admit card, result, upcoming notifications, etc., will be uploaded on the official website.
Number of Vacancy: 01 Posts
Educational Qualification: Degree in Architecture or Town Planning or equivalent from a recognized university;
Desirable:
(a) fifteen years' experience in Town Planning/ Architecture in local bodies/townships;
(b) good knowledge of Delhi's building bye-laws;
(c) original work done in the field of Town Planning.
Pay Scale:
INR
37400-67000/- Per Month
Age Limit: Maximum 56 Years.
Selection Procedure: please refer to official notification.
Application Fee: please refer to official notification.
The eligible and willing officers may submit their applications in the prescribed proforma through their Cadre Controlling Authorities along with all relevant documents to Shri Surya Narayan Jha, Under Secretary (Delhi Division-II), Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, 8th Floor, GPOA-2 Building, Sankalp Bhawan, KG Marg, New Delhi 110001 within 45 days of the publication of this advertisement in the Employment News. Incomplete applications and advance copies shall not be considered and shall be summarily rejected. [This Job Source Employment News 25 - 31 October 2025 (VOL NO 30), Page No.10]
Published on: 23rd October 2025
For more details, please refer to official notification at Download Official Notification
| Job Details | Closing Date |
|---|---|
|
Secretary
( 01 Posts) Posts • Lodhi Road, New Delhi
|
10th December 2025 |
The Delhi Urban Art Commission was set up by an Act of Parliament in 1973 to "advise the Government of India in the matter of preserving, developing and maintaining the aesthetic quality of urban and environmental design within Delhi and to provide advice and guidance to any local body in respect of any project of building operations or engineering operations or any development proposal which affects or is like to affect the skyline or the aesthetic quality of the surroundings or any public amenity provided therein" The area of urban Delhi has expanded and it has become more densely built in the years since the DUAC was constituted. This gives even greater relevance to the injunctions in the original mandate. Ecology and heritage are more pressing concerns now, the difficulties of seeing the city as a whole in a situation where there are many decision- making bodies is more evident than before, and there is urgent need to have a vision for the future of the city's constituent elements.
If in the 1970s the predominant concern was about uncontrolled high-rise development, in the 1980s issues linked with Asian Games in the 1990s the building of Dwarka and the freezing of the New Delhi Bungalow area, this decade's main concerns are about four issues - the threats to the remaining oases of open spaces, riverine and forest, the need to improve the quality of life in historic precincts, the need to ensure that dilapidated areas are 'redeveloped' elegantly, and to find ways in which traffic networks can work efficiently but with a humane quality. The DUAC took significant initiative to highlight city-level issues in an exhibition ‘Imagining Delhi’.