Few addresses in Delhi carry as much symbolism as the Delhi Gymkhana Club. To some, it is a heritage institution. To others, it is a reminder of colonial privilege surviving on public land. As of May 2026, the club is back in the headlines: reports say the Centre has asked it to vacate its Safdarjung Road premises, while related proceedings are reportedly before the Delhi High Court.
Quick answer. The Delhi Gymkhana Club, founded in 1913 as the Imperial Delhi Gymkhana Club, sits on government-owned land in Lutyens' Delhi. In May 2026, the Centre reportedly issued a notice asking it to vacate. On 26 May 2026, reports said the Centre assured the Delhi High Court there would be no forcible possession without following due legal process.
If you are short on time, jump to What RTI questions can citizens ask.
The Delhi Gymkhana Club is among India's oldest social clubs. It sits on Safdarjung Road in central New Delhi, inside the area planned by Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker as the imperial capital. It runs sports, dining, library, accommodation and event facilities for members. Membership is limited, has long waiting lists, and is highly prized in Delhi's official, professional and business circles.
According to the club's official history, it moved to its present location on 3 July 1913, while Delhi was being rebuilt as the new imperial capital. It was first known as the Imperial Delhi Gymkhana Club. Spencer Harcourt Butler — later a senior British administrator — served as its first president.
In the early 20th century, “gymkhana” clubs were a fixture of British India. They were modelled on London's gentlemen's clubs but adapted for Indian conditions: wide lawns, deep verandahs, billiard rooms, polo grounds, tennis and squash courts. In Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and the cantonment towns, such clubs gave officers, civilians and visiting officials a controlled social space between the cantonment and the secretariat.
Membership rules of that era were openly restrictive. They were shaped by race, rank and class. Who could enter, who could swim, who could dine in the main hall, and on which days — all of this was decided by bye-laws written for a colonial order.
After India became independent in 1947, the word “Imperial” was dropped from the name. The club, like several similar institutions, was Indianised in membership. The broader culture — uniforms, dress codes, member privileges, succession of family memberships, waiting lists — was largely retained and adapted.
Over the decades, the club's members came to include senior civil servants, judges, military officers, ministers, parliamentarians, industrialists, lawyers, doctors, journalists and professionals. The waiting list grew long enough that admission became, in itself, a Delhi story.
The Delhi Gymkhana sits within the Lutyens' Bungalow Zone (LBZ) — the protected low-rise heritage zone of New Delhi that also contains Parliament, Rashtrapati Bhavan, North and South Block, India Gate and many central ministers' residences. The LBZ has special building bye-laws to preserve its character: low floor-area ratio, height limits, mandatory setbacks and tree protection.
The club's white plastered buildings, deep verandahs, tennis courts, swimming pool, lawns and old trees fit that aesthetic. To residents and visitors, this physical setting is one reason the club is widely associated with privilege — and one reason any change of use, eviction or redevelopment becomes a public-interest question, not just a private contractual one.
Three things make the Delhi Gymkhana stand out from other social clubs:
None of this is illegal in itself. But it explains why public debate around the club is not only about square footage and rent. It is also about who gets to use prime public land, on what terms, and whether the wider public has any reasonable access to it.
Most central New Delhi land is owned by the Government of India and administered by the Land and Development Office (L&DO) under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. Clubs, embassies, institutions and bungalows in this zone typically hold their land on lease — a perpetual lease, a long-term lease, or a renewable one — and pay rent or licence fees set by the lessor.
This is the core question: when public land is leased to a private members' club at concessional rates, what does the public get in return? Heritage? Sport? Civic events? Or is the leasehold essentially a private benefit subsidised by the public exchequer?
This question is not unique to the Delhi Gymkhana. It applies to similar clubs and trusts across Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Pune and other cities.
The Delhi Gymkhana Club has been involved in extended legal and administrative disputes for several years. According to public reports and orders, these have included:
The exact legal position — which orders are operative, which are stayed, which are under appeal — depends on the latest court records and tribunal orders. Citizens and journalists trying to follow the matter should rely on certified copies of orders rather than only on news summaries.
In May 2026, the controversy returned to the front pages. Media reports said the Centre had issued a notice asking the Delhi Gymkhana Club to vacate its Safdarjung Road premises. The reasons mentioned in reports include alleged outstanding dues, lease compliance and the use of public land. The matter, the reports said, is also before the Delhi High Court.
On 26 May 2026, reports stated that the Centre had assured the Delhi High Court that there would be no forcible possession of the premises without following the due legal process. This assurance, as reported, is significant. It does not, by itself, decide the merits — whether the club must eventually vacate, pay arrears, or both — but it sets a procedural floor: any change in possession should follow a lawful, reasoned route.
The final legal position will depend on official orders, the response of the club, and any further directions of the court.
This is a contested matter. A public-interest reading should fairly summarise both positions.
Both sets of arguments can be true at the same time. That is why this matter needs careful reading of records, not slogans.
This is where the Right to Information Act, 2005 becomes a citizen tool. The L&DO, the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, the Central Public Works Department (CPWD), and other relevant authorities are clearly “public authorities” under §2(h) of the Act. Records relating to the lease of the land, the dues, the notices, inspections and government correspondence fall within “information” as defined in §2(f).
A citizen can file applications under §6(1) with reasonable specificity. Sample questions include:
Citizens should remember §8(1) exemptions and §10 severability. Some parts of an answer may be lawfully withheld, but a blanket “no” without reasons is not the law. If a public authority denies information or replies evasively, the next step is a first appeal under §19(1), to be filed within 30 days of the deemed-denial deadline. The AI RTI Drafter can help shape the original §6(1) application, and the First Appeal Builder handles the §19 stage.
The Delhi Gymkhana Club case is, in the end, not really about one club. It is a test case for several recurring Indian questions:
A heritage institution and a public-land tenant are not separate identities. They are the same legal person under different lenses. The Delhi Gymkhana Club controversy is a chance for India to ask grown-up questions: what do we want our prime urban land to do, who should benefit, and what records should be open by default?
Citizens do not need to be members of a club to have a stake in this question. The land is owned in their name. The records are held in their name. The RTI Act is written for exactly this kind of moment.
Disclaimer. This article is for public information and should not be treated as legal advice. References to ongoing court matters, notices and dues are based on media reports as of the date of publication. The final legal position will depend on official records and judicial orders. Read The RTI Playbook for the full citizen handbook on filing, appealing and escalating RTI applications.
According to the club's official history, it moved to its present Safdarjung Road premises on 3 July 1913, during the rebuilding of Delhi as the imperial capital. It is among India's oldest social clubs.
It was originally known as the Imperial Delhi Gymkhana Club. After India's Independence in 1947, the word “Imperial” was dropped, and the institution has since been known as the Delhi Gymkhana Club.
The club is on Safdarjung Road, in the Lutyens' Bungalow Zone of central New Delhi. This is the area planned by Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker as the new imperial capital, and it includes Parliament, Rashtrapati Bhavan and several central ministries.
The club sits on land owned by the Government of India and leased to it, on terms that critics argue are concessional. Disputes over dues, governance, membership practices and lease compliance have led to extended litigation, tribunal proceedings and government intervention.
As of May 2026, media reports state that the Centre has issued a notice asking the club to vacate. The matter is reportedly before the Delhi High Court. On 26 May 2026, reports said the Centre assured the court that there would be no forcible possession without due legal process. The final position will depend on official orders.
The L&DO, the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs and related bodies are public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act, 2005. Citizens can seek records of the lease, dues, notices, audits and government correspondence through §6(1) applications, and escalate via first appeal under §19(1) if denied.
Because the land is public. Decisions about its use, its lease terms, and the dues recovered from its tenant directly affect the public exchequer and set the standard of accountability for similar institutions across India. Every citizen has a clear legal and civic stake.
If public land, heritage buildings, club leases or government notices affect public interest, citizens have the right to seek records through RTI. Start with The RTI Playbook.