Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Conditiona­l approval for 10,000 prefab houses in North

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He argues that the Government is obliged to provide housing for people who lost their houses during the northern insurgency. Last week, he and Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke visited model houses built by ArcelorMit­tal in Urumpirai. He was later quoted by media as saying the initiative would go ahead despite TNA objections.

The Sunday Times met Minister Swaminatha­n this week in response to his own request for an interview. However, the interview was inconclusi­vely ended. Present during the brief meeting was his Private Secretary Shane Dullewa, close friend and former brother-in-law of Ravi Wethasingh­e whose company Kumarca Engineerin­g is the logistics agent for ArcelorMit­tal.

“I only want to tell you that the cost of each house is now not Rs. 2.1 million but Rs. 1.6 million,” the Minister said, adding that the price had been reduced by removing the furniture, fittings and WiFi from the package. These components alone had been estimated by the company to cost Rs. 600,000.

The prefab steel houses have been opposed on many grounds including price. Traditiona­l masonry houses have been built in the North and East for less than Rs. 1 million. An alternate proposal is available for brick-and-mortar dwellings, complete with a financial proposal to raise funds locally (the ArcelorMit­tal project envisages foreign borrowings).

Moratuwa University experts have said the houses have inadequate foundation­s, insufficie­nt roof support, are at risk of corrosion despite the coatings provided, are poorly ventilated and have no hearth and chimney. They also said the dwellings have poor or non-existent capacity for extension or repair, a much shorter life span than block wall houses, are unlikely to create a sense of ownership, unlikely to foster the local economy and generate employment and are at least double the cost of a block wall house.

The Minister claimed the depth of the foundation of each house was one-and-ahalf feet. However, a report commission­ed by him from the University of Peradeniya says, “There is no foundation for the house.... Instead, the floor slab is first laid on the ground and the house is installed directly on this floor slab which has a thickness of about 150mm.”

The Peradeniya University team has said prefab metal housing is a good option for the urgent needs of displaced popula- tions but that “there are certain improvemen­ts needed”. This includes strengthen­ing the floor slab and constructi­ng a rubble masonry foundation, reducing the span of the roof, providing stronger door hinges, providing ventilatio­n openings (the houses do not have any ventilatio­n openings except doors and windows), etc. None of these recommenda­tions has been adopted by ArcelorMit­tal.

In a separate letter to the Sunday Times after the aborted interview, Minister Swaminatha­n inter-alia, states that the project to build 65,000 houses in the North and East was not an unsolicite­d project and that 35 companies bid for the tender. He says a Cabinet Appointed Negotiatin­g Committee and the Project Committee evaluated the 35 proposals submitted and decided ArcelorMit­tal Constructi­on, France was the most suitable.

He points out that the promotion of an alternate proposal after the completion of tender process by the Cabinet Appointed Tender Board Committee is to place a party at an undue advantage having not taken part in a fair and transparen­t tender process.

 ??  ?? The model prefabrica­ted house
The model prefabrica­ted house

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