Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Cascade of failures brought Buwelikada house crashing down

A FOOLISH MAN BUILT HIS HOUSE UPON THE SAND …

- By Chrishanth­i Christophe­r

An overwhelmi­ng failure in integrity, official due diligence and building standards led to the collapse of a five-storey building last week in Buwelikada, Kandy that killed a family of three, the Constructi­on Developmen­t Authority (CIDA) has found.

Alarmingly, CIDA notes that one in two builders flout the rule to obtain certificat­ion that building has been carried out according to approved plans.

CIDA’s report said the foundation of the building, which had been designed for two storeys including a basement, had given way under the weight of three more levels added without legitimate approval from the Kandy Municipal Council (KMC).

The house was built on sand, which was riven with waterways under the building, and these factors contribute­d to the collapse. The Sunday Times learned last week that Buwelikada means “boowella” or loose soil.

There was insufficie­nt attention paid to the multi-level loading of the structure in such weak soil conditions. Reinforcem­ent of the superstruc­ture was inadequate, an onsite inspection by CIDA’s District Inspector found.

Unqualifie­d technical staff and unregulate­d contractor­s were engaged on the project.

CIDA’s report, compiled from informal informatio­n obtained from KMC approvals and informatio­n on contractor­s, states although the first and second stages of the building had been designed and constructe­d by qualified profession­als the constructi­on company was not registered with CIDA’s National Registrati­on Authority.

The report says official monitoring of constructi­on, including site inspection­s, was lacking, allowing a loophole for errant builders to ignore official standards.

CIDA said only 50 per cent of builders adhere to the regulation to obtain a Certificat­e of Conformity (COC) on completion of cnstructio­n.

CIDA emphasised all clients, builders, consultant­s and contractor­s adopt ethical practices to avoid calamities of this nature.

The agency reminds prospectiv­e builders that they can avail themselves of CIDA’s online Constructi­on Contractor Monitoring System, which rates registered contractor­s employed on projects costing more than Rs. 50 million.

A Code of Conduct developed in consultati­on with the National Constructi­on

Associatio­ns and Chambers is currently being finalised by CIDA. It is expected that adherence to the code, in addition to voluntary ethical practice, would insulate the system from failure.

CIDA is also contemplat­ing bringing an amendment to section 30 of CID Act No 33 of 2014 to bind this practice by a regulation.

The constructi­on of state buildings and public infrastruc­ture costing Rs.10 million or more must, under the CID Act 33 of 2014, be carried out by qualified personnel who must use standard documents in the process. All such registered contractor­s must be monitored by the local authoritie­s and CIDA.

 ??  ?? A crumpled heap: The five-storey building
A crumpled heap: The five-storey building

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