Chinar Courts Housing Society, also known as Chinar Courts Farm Housing Scheme, is an LDA-approved scheme launched in April 1993. It is fully developed with paved roads, boundary walls, water, and electricity connections, offering about 95 residential plots ranging from 4 to 7 kanals. The society features a canal-side setting and is designed for spacious farm-house style living, making it a prime suburban choice in Lahore.
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Chinar Courts Farm Housing Scheme, officially approved by the Lahore Development Authority (LDA) on 22 March 1993 as Scheme #93 under the Greater Lahore Cooperative Housing Society, continues to appear in the 2025–2026 LDA-approved societies list. It retains full legal validity and is listed alongside Chinar Bagh in official LDA records. However, no new construction activity, sales promotions, regulatory actions, or infrastructure announcements related to Chinar Courts have been reported in verified sources from the past year.
While Chinar Courts itself shows no recent operational updates, the closely named Chinar Bagh Housing Society (approved 14-01-1992, Scheme #92) exhibits ongoing market activity: multiple YouTube videos (July 2025, February 2025), Facebook listings (May 2026), and real estate portals confirm active plot sales, rental offerings, and drone-based site visits. This reflects sustained investor interest in the broader 'Chinar' brand zone near Raiwind Road and Lake City — though it is legally and administratively separate from Chinar Courts.
The society is fully developed with roads and boundary walls, and a majority of the allotted plots have been taken possession of with construction underway.
Well-located on Raiwind Road with easy access from multiple points, benefiting from scenic canal frontage.
Internally connected to Bahria Orchard Phase 3 through a 40-foot road, providing easy access to its commercial and recreational facilities.
Considered an affordable farm-housing scheme, offering plots and houses at lower prices compared to nearby societies like Bahria Orchard.
Has LDA approval for a significant portion of the land (3,398 kanals approved out of 6,000), which is a major plus for owners.
Allegations that certain blocks (e.g., Punjab Block, Jhelum Block) were never approved by the LDA or the Co-Operative Housing Department, raising legal concerns.
Difficulties in reselling properties with reported price ceilings significantly lower than original purchase prices (e.g., PKR 16-20 lakh for 2 kanal), discouraging transactions.
Serious management problems, including a big corruption case against the current committee, leading to distrust among residents and buyers.
Poor maintenance of common areas and limited community facilities compared to expectations.
Accusations of fraud and negative online discussions/video exposés highlighting issues, leading to caution among prospective buyers.