Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Five-storey building with minuscule windows, doors

- HT Correspond­ents htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : The five-storey building, where 43 persons were killed in Sunday morning’s fire, is possibly one of the largest in north Delhi’s Anaj Mandi — among whose narrow crowded lanes several structures jostle for space.

Yet, the building had only one small entry and exit, measuring not more than 5 feet wide and 7 feet high.

In this lane, where the ground floor of almost every building has an illegal factory or godown, this building — measuring about 600 square yards — housed many small-scale factory units.Until 15 years ago, the building was an automobile service centre for a popular motorcycle brand. Before that, it was a pulses mill.

Located not more than 500 metres from Rani Jhansi Road in north Delhi, Anaj Mandi was once the perfect location to run a business. But over the years, as illegal factories mushroomed in the ground and upper floors of the buildings in the locality’s narrow lanes, the service centre shut shop.

Locals say the service centre owner left because the place had become too congested. It was no place to work with automobile­s, oil, or heavy machinery.

The illegal factories in the adjacent buildings had made the place a tinderbox.

A day before Sunday’s fire, there was another small fire reported from the area. “What replaced the service centre was even more dangerous.

The owner divided the factory within the family. Around 2004, the owner’s son and relatives — who got possession of the factory — rented space to different contractor­s. Multiple factories sprouted in one building. They used plastic. We could see smoke coming out from the windows sometimes,” said Fahim, a local, who lives next to the factory.

The ground floor housed a plastic frames factory. The first floor had a school bag factory. The second, third, and the fourth floor had factories manufactur­ing plastic toys, plastic folders and a T shirt printing unit.

A police officer, who visited the building, said, “At every floor, there were 4-5 rooms, housing different small-scale factories. There were plastic and paint thinner and chemicals all around. When we went in the afternoon, the power supply had been cut off in the whole area. The building inside was completely dark. The building had no proper windows,” the officer said. Most locals said that they cannot put an exact number on the number of workers working inside.

 ??  ?? The building had a narrow entry/exit. Its windows (above) were all small and grilled, with little scope for escape. SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO
The building had a narrow entry/exit. Its windows (above) were all small and grilled, with little scope for escape. SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO

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