Islamabad’s green vistas turn gray as population boom brings concrete wave

Islamabad's green vistas turn gray as population boom brings concrete wave Islamabad's green vistas turn gray as population boom brings concrete wave

ISLAMABAD — For nearly 20 years, a restaurant called Monal was a go-to fixture for well-heeled diners in Pakistan’s capital. Perched high above Islamabad’s center in the cool hillside air of a giant, verdant park, the main appeal of the vast eatery was the vistas it offered, a window onto a fast-growing city.

Now, all that remains of Monal, which once could host up to 1,500 diners at a time, is rubble. Last year, in a win for environmental campaigners, the country’s supreme court ordered its closure and the destruction of its extensive layout on environmental grounds, seeking to protect biodiversity in its home, a reserve in the foothills of the Himalayas on Islamabad’s fringe that is 50 times the size of New York’s Central Park.