CM Revanth Reviews Telangana Tourism Projects, Eyes Eco-Parks
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Telangana announced on Monday, July 6, 2026, that Chief Minister Revanth Reddy chaired a high-level review meeting on tourism development projects across the state, directing officials to accelerate work on eco-tourism, heritage sites, and urban attractions. The meeting was held at the Bodhi Pavilion, MCRHRDI, Hyderabad.
Context
The CMO post, in Telugu, states that CM Revanth Reddy reviewed the Tourism Department and directed officials to develop eco-tourism on forest department lands within the Hyderabad Core Urban Area (CURE) in coordination with the tourism department. The meeting was attended by CM Adviser K. Ramakrishna Rao, Special Principal Secretary Jayesh Ranjan, Tourism Special Principal Secretary Vani Prasad, and other senior officials.
The Chief Minister instructed that forest lands within the #BharatFutureCity zone be developed as internationally benchmarked tourism destinations, and that eco-parks modelled on the Gurramguda Eco Park be established across the city.
Policy Backdrop
Telangana has pursued eco-tourism and urban park development since the state's formation in 2014, with successive governments integrating forest land management into city tourism frameworks. The current administration, which took office in December 2023, has prioritised tourism infrastructure upgrades as a pillar of its economic agenda.
The directive to develop Vikarabad as a Tourism Hub under the Tourism Hub Development Scheme — centred on the Sri Veerabhadra Swamy Temple — follows the model used for Yadagirigutta, where a governing board transformed temple administration and surrounding infrastructure. CM Revanth Reddy also directed that a similar governing board be constituted for the Vikarabad temple.
Stakeholders and Impact
The directives cover a wide range of sites: Taramati Baradari is to be made more attractive; Durgam Cheruvu is to be developed as a full-scale tourism destination; and guest houses Manjira and Dilkusha are to be modernised. Heritage structures such as Puranapul bridge are to be redeveloped as tourism zones, with traffic potentially rerouted after development to prioritise visitor access.
Urban residents, temple pilgrims, heritage tourists, and private investors in the tourism sector stand to be directly affected. The push to develop eco-parks inside city limits also addresses the dual goal of preserving green cover while creating accessible public attractions.
What's Next
CM Revanth Reddy directed officials to begin preparatory work for the Global Investment Summit planned for December 2026, which is intended to attract private investment into the tourism sector. High-level inter-departmental coordination committees are to be constituted to drive this effort.
Dedicated officers are to be appointed specifically for eco-tourism projects under the CURE framework to ensure momentum. The formation of these committees and on-ground progress at sites including Durgam Cheruvu, Taramati Baradari, and Puranapul will be the key indicators of how quickly these directives translate into action.