Centralised public works in India can be traced to the efforts of Lord Dalhousie and
Sir Arthur Cotton in the mid 19th century. Sir Arthur Cotton sumed up the early policy of the
East India Company rulers thus, Public works have been almost entirely neglected throughout India. The motto hitherto has been: Do nothing, have nothing done, let nobody do anything. Bear any loss, let the people die of famine, let hundreds of lakhs be lost in revenue for want of water or roads, rather than do anything. – Arthur Cotton (1854) Lord Dalhousie established the Central Public Works Department, and
irrigation projects were among the earliest to be started. The Public Works Department was formally established in the year 1854 in the sixth year of
Lord Dalhousie's tenure as Governor General. In the minutes of the meeting held on 12 July 1854, the Governor General resolved that a central agency be provided by creating an office of Secretary to the Government of India in the Department of Public Works. The note recorded by Lord Dalhousie was as follows: “The organisation of the Department of Public Works in the Indian Empire will be incomplete unless it shall be provided for the Supreme Government itself come into agency by which it may be enabled to exercise the universal control confided to it over public works in India with the best of scientific knowledge, authority, and system. The Government of India shall no longer be dependent on expedients, but should be provided with a permanent and highly qualified agency to assist in the direction of this important branch of public affairs. I have, therefore, now to propose that such an agency should be provided by creating an office of the Secretary to the Government of India in the Department of Public Works. The person who holds it should always be a highly qualified officer of the Corps of Engineers.” Colonel W.E. Baker of the Bengal Engineers was accordingly appointed first Secretary to the Department of Public Works, this is the genesis of the Central Public Works Department.
Sir Teja Singh Malik was the first Indian head of the CPWD. CPWD has PAN India presence and has ability to undertake construction of complex projects even in difficult terrain and maintenance in post construction stage. In 1954, the CPWD played an important role in the International Exhibition on Low-Cost Housing held in New Delhi. The exhibition was sponsored by the
Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, known as the Ministry of Works, Housing & Supply at the time. The CPWD put on display 12 full-scale models of cheap housing. The CPWD also adopted one of the housing designs created by
Habib Rahman, who was Senior Architect in the CPWD, for the construction of quarters in New Delhi. CPWD had been involved in construction of stadiums and other infrastructure requirements for Asian Games 1982 and Commonwealth Games 2010. == Functions of CPWD ==