Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Seven years on, no lessons learnt from Lalita Park collapse

- Abhinav Rajput abhinav@hindustant­imes.com

Sunday’s building collapse in Laxmi Nagar was a stark reminder of the 2010 Lalita Park building collapse that killed 71 people. Seven years later, Delhi seemed to have not learnt any lessons.

Several buildings near Lalita Park continue to violate building laws, adding extra floors for additional rental incomes and encroachin­g road space making it impossible for fire brigade officials to reach the site.

After the building collapse in Laita Park, the government had constitute­d an inquiry commission, headed by retired justice Lokeshwar Prasad. A report prepared after surveying 10,000 buildings in east Delhi said that most of them were unsafe. The findings of the survey went on to say that several buildings were of poor quality due to the inferior constructi­on material used.

Sushil Kumar, member of the Resident Welfare associatio­n of Lalita Park area, said, “The guideline states that the houses cannot be extended beyond 45 feet in height. But several builder flats violate the norms. There are building that have been constructe­d up to six floors. There is hardly any house that has not extended its boundary.”

Sources in the corporatio­n said that the civic agency has no scientific mechanism to check the strength of building except for looking for cracks in the structure.

Mohammad Shakeel, who lives in the house next to the place where the building had collapsed in Lalita Park, said, “The builders want to make quick money. They violate all laws and sell flats.”

Built on the Yamuna floodplain­s, Laxmi Nagar is especially vulnerable to such collapses as the area has a sandy soil. As the groundwate­r level increases with heavy rainfall, the basements get flooded, weakening the foundation of buildings.

“One needs to do soil testing before constructi­ng a flat. If it is a sandy soil, extra precaution­s need to be maintained. But soil testing is not in our genes,” said Ajay Chaudhury, architect and former faculty member at Institute of Architectu­re and Town Planning.

The IIT-Delhi report prepared after the Lalita Park tragedy also said that the flooding in 2010 led to water level rising in the area around the Yamuna. This weakened the foundation of the building. Prima facie, the investigat­ion in the Sunday house collapse also suggests that the foundation of building was weakened due to seepage.

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