The court gave the direction while allowing the DPL to initiate steps for appointing an agency to remove the rubble generated by demolition of a portion of the building earlier.
A vacation bench of Justices Sanjeev Sachdeva and A K Chawla said that the DPL has to first ascertain which floors of the central Delhi building, housing the 55-year-old library, need to be demolished and submit a report to the court.
It said that its interim order restraining the North Delhi Municipal Corporation (NDMC) from demolishing the building would continue.
The order came during the hearing an application filed by the building's owner, seeking directions to the library to appoint an independent agency to clear the rubble.
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The owner, Dimple Enterprises, has claimed that the rubble is adding to the structural instability of the building and also contended that two of its floors are in a bad state and need to be removed.
The court had earlier stopped the NDMC from taking any further step, saying the library "shall be kept closed and nobody shall be permitted to enter the premises till further order".
It had also asked the Centre to consider the reports given by the IIT, Delhi and the Central Public Works Department (CPWD) after inspecting premises and to take a decision with regard to the building's structural stability.
"The NDMC has been manipulated by using corrupt practices to declare the premises as dangerous now, while in 2011, the same civic body had certified the building as safe, provided minor maintenance (was carried out," the main petition has said.
It has alleged that "pressure and corrupt tactics by the owners" was behind the demolition move.
The petitioners had also claimed there was no likelihood of an immediate danger to passers-by or others while entering the premises.
It comprises officers from both the central and the Delhi governments, intellectuals, members of the Legislative Assembly and councillors.
The first Delhi Public Library was started by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru across the old Delhi railway station in 1951.
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