Deccan Chronicle

Snakes threaten leaky OU Arts College

Some walls of the 80-yr-old building appear soaked from inside

- SANJAY SAMUEL PAUL | DC

Arts College building, the pride of Osmania University campus, is leaking. The listed heritage structure is deteriorat­ing little by little every monsoon. This year’s latest round of rains has only made matters worse.

Some walls of the 80-yearold building appear soaked from inside. According to staff working at the Arts College, it is common to find pools of water collecting in classrooms and offices located in basement. Plaster chipping off and falling is not uncommon in many parts of the building.

A visit to Arts College revealed water leaking into the building from its roof. There are large patches of moisture on original lime mortar walls of different floors. Repairs, mostly patch work, however, are being taken up using cement. Repainting is being done from time to time to cover up patch work, though it is in complete disregard of norms pertaining to repair and restoratio­n of heritage structures.

According to OU Arts College caretaker Linga Reddy, repairs and renovation work are on. They have only been stopped on account of rains. “Earlier, work had been delayed for a prolonged period because we did not have a vice chancellor for a long period. Now that a VC has been appointed, work will start soon,” he maintained.

While structural damage to the Arts College building due rains and decades of apparent neglect of maintenanc­e is clearly visible, students and university staff are also complainin­g of repeated threats from snakes that crawl into the building, particular­ly classrooms and other spaces in basement. In the latest instance on July 12, a nearly seven-foot cobra had been discovered in a corridor of the basement. This is the second poisonous snake found in the Arts College building in the last two months. On June 8, another cobra was spotted coiled inside a men’s toilet. It escaped by entering the sewer line through the commode.

Security guard K. Krishna, who opened the door of Journalism Department in the basement on July 12, said, “We found a seven-foot-long cobra with its hood open and ready to attack. We closed the door and called snack catchers. They captured the cobra.”

Paul Marx, a student leader of Osmania University, said, “This building is the prestige of Telangana. The newly appointed vice chancellor should prioritise adequate funds for the heritage building’s maintenanc­e and restoratio­n.”

 ??  ?? Nearly seven-foot cobra caught in a corridor of the basement.
Nearly seven-foot cobra caught in a corridor of the basement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India