Jump to content

Government Central Press, Chennai

Coordinates: 13°06′13″N 80°16′48″E / 13.103542°N 80.280084°E / 13.103542; 80.280084
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

13°06′13″N 80°16′48″E / 13.103542°N 80.280084°E / 13.103542; 80.280084 The Government Central Press in Chennai houses the stationery and printing department of the Tamil Nadu government, undertaking the printing works of the state government and maintenance of government records. Presently, it has eight branch presses and stationery stores functioning under its control. In 2017, the department had 1,646 employees, including 433 women.[1]

History

[edit]

The building was constructed in 1807 by the English East India Company.[2] The Government Central Press was established on 17 December 1831.[1]

The building

[edit]

The L-shaped single-storey building is built in a land covering 5.5 acres and is spread over an area of 36,000 square feet.[1][2] The store house in the complex was gutted in a fire in June 2013. In 2017, the government proposed to renovate the structure at a cost of about 125 million.[2]

The Press and its functions

[edit]

The Government Central Press is located at Mint Buildings in Mint Street, George Town. It land covers an area of 5.5 acres. The Press has 880 employees.[1]

The Press includes the Government Central Press, Government Stationery Stores, and Government Branch Press at the Madras High Court Buildings all within the city. The branch presses are located at Madurai, Trichy, Salem, Pudukkottai, Vridhachalam, and Madras High Court Bench at Madurai.[1]

The chief functions of the Government Central Press including the printing of gazettes, assembly debates, reports, budget documents, bulletins, election papers, reports of Accountant General, registration certificates of motor vehicles, letter heads and letter pads of government dignitaries, government codes and manuals, periodicals, forms and registers, and government examination materials.[1]

The Government Stationery Stores is the centralised agency for the annual supply of stationery articles to the government.[1]

The Government Branch Press at the High Court Buildings caters to the printing needs of the Madras High Court.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "History of Stationery and Printing Department". Stationery and Printing Department. Government of Tamil Nadu. n.d. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  2. ^ a b c K., Lakshmi (13 December 2017). "3 historic buildings to rise from the ruins". The Hindu. Chennai: Kasturi & Sons. p. 2. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
[edit]