Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Mother of all demolition­s’ brings down Delhi’s Twin Towers

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INDIA demolished two residentia­l high-rise buildings outside New Delhi last Sunday (28), in a dramatic spectacle carried live on television channels after days of excited media build-up.

The destructio­n of the 100-metre-high “Twin Towers” in Noida, home to a concrete forest of similar structures, was also a rare example of India getting tough on corrupt developers and officials.

The 32 floors of Apex and the 29 of Ceyane towers, featuring between them nearly 1,000 apartments that were never occupied in nine years of legal disputes, were brought down in seconds, creating an immense cloud of dust and debris (pictured right).

The controlled implosions that used 3,700 kg (8,160 pounds) of explosives were India’s biggest demolition to date, local media reported. Thousands of people, as well as stray dogs, had to be evacuated before the blast, including from neighbouri­ng high-rises, one of which was reportedly just nine metres away.

There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage to nearby buildings, and a local official told reporters the operation had gone “largely as planned”.

Indian media reported minute details of the demolition, including the number of holes drilled for the charges (9,642) and the volume of debris (80,000 tonnes).

The TV news channel Times Now which, like others, ran a countdown timer and showed little else last Sunday morning, called it the “mother of all demolition­s” of the “towers of shame”.

The legal dispute over the towers went all the way to India’s Supreme Court, which ruled last year that the buildings had breached safety regulation­s and that the developers colluded with corrupt authoritie­s.

The world’s fastest-growing major economy has seen a constructi­on boom in the last two decades. It has also given rise to a nexus of corruption involving politician­s, bureaucrat­s and powerful builders.

Developers often sidestep many constructi­on, urban-planning and environmen­tal regulation­s, usually with impunity.

In Delhi’s suburbs of Noida and Greater Noida – where the towers were demolished on Sunday – it is estimated that more than 100 residentia­l towers have been abandoned by builders, making these areas look like ghost cities.

The outskirts of major cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore have become traps for middle-class buyers who invest in projects that are never completed or get drawn into similar legal sagas.

Uday Bhan Singh Teotia, one of a group of residents whose case against private developer Supertech led to the demolition order, said before the event that it would be a vindicatio­n of his legal battle.

“The two new towers that they constructe­d were blocking everything – our air and sunlight,” Teotia, who lives close to the structures, said.

Demolition­s of residentia­l buildings are rare in India, with builders often escaping without having to pay penalties or abandoning projects midway if they fall foul of the law.

Four luxury high-rises in the southern state of Kerala were demolished for breaking environmen­tal rules in 2020.

Lawyer Jayant Bhushan, who represente­d the complainan­ts in the case against Supertech, said builders must clean up their act to win back homebuyers’ trust.

“Unless builders follow rules, it will be hapless buyers who will end up burning their fingers again and again,” he said.

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