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Kanpur Development Authority to allot over 1,300 plots through lottery

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The Times of India               20.08.2013

Kanpur Development Authority to allot over 1,300 plots through lottery

KANPUR: Kanpur Development Authority (KDA) would soon provide more than 1,300 residential and commercial plots to the citizens.

Majority of the plots would be at Highway City part II while remaining would be at Deendayalpuram. Commercial plots would be sold by auction while residential plots would be allotted by lottery.

As many as 1,326 plots are in Highway City part II scheme. In this scheme, there would be 481 plots for LIG category, 437 for EWS and 313 for MIG group. There would be 95 plots for HIG. All the plots would be allotted through lottery.

As many as 29 commercial plots had been identified at Deendayalpuram. These would be auctioned. KDA was taking steps to implement schemes at Chakeri and Panki areas and within a few months, more plots would be available to people.

 

BBMP to raze unauthorised buildings

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The New Indian Express                20.08.2013

BBMP to raze unauthorised buildings

To send a strong message to people who violate building bylaws with impunity, the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) is taking up a drive to demolish under-construction buildings which do not comply with the norms.

BBMP Commissioner M Lakshminarayana ordered the demolition of the buildings.  Even a community hall in Kengeri, which had partially collapsed on August 5 killing three workers, will be demolished.

“By suspending officials and demolishing such buildings, we are trying to instil fear among those who do not comply with the norms,” Lakshminarayana told Express.

Assistant Engineers Santosh and Panchakshari, who were working at Siddapura ward where the building is located, were suspended from service pending inquiry.The building had three floors which were illegally constructed.

“Demolition of illegal buildings is a signal to the builders who are trying to construct extra floors without taking permission (from the BBMP). The Zonal Commissioner, Chief Engineers, Executive Engineers to Assistant Engineers, all should check it.”

He said the building was constructed by Saleem, a builder. He normally takes vacant sites and construct apartment complexes. The builder had taken permission to construct an apartment complex with basement, ground floor and two more floors. But he had constructed three more floors without taking permission, he said.

The BBMP authorities also found that the builder has two more buildings in the same lane. Of the two, the violation was similar to the building that collapsed  in one and in another, a floor was constructed without permission, Lakshminarayana said. 

Residents Dread Demolition

Most of the houses at Someshwara Layout are packed together with hardly any space between them. When the apartment block collapsed on Monday, a sheet roofed house next to it had boulders falling on to their roof. Pointing to the debris in her compound wall, Poornima, a resident,  asked, “Tomorrow, if my house is  the first one to go, where do I have to go?”

The residents in these houses refused to even go out of their homes. “We can move out now. Where are we to sleep the night? Even if we stay a few days in a relatives home, for how many days do we have to stay there?” asked Manjula, whose house would also be affected by the demolishing. Most of the houses that will be affected belong to the low income groups BBMP plans to demolish the apartment blocks on Tuesday morning.

 

Civic panel to audit buildings over 30 years old in pipeline

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The Indian Express                20.08.2013

Civic panel to audit buildings over 30 years old in pipeline

To curb the proliferation of fake structural audit certificates, BMC is in the process of forming a panel of certified architects and engineers to audit buildings over 30 years of age.

"It is at a preliminary stage but the corporation has decided to form a panel of certified architects and structural engineers registered with the BMC, who will be available to citizens for examining buildings over 30 years old. The panel will declare whether the buildings are safe for habitation or not. Work in this regard is going on between the Development Plan department and the municipal commissioner," said additional municipal commissioner Mohan Adtani.

After a spate of building collapses at the start of the monsoon this year that collectively killed 17 persons and injured 14, BMC issued a public notice in June. The civic body demanded the structural audit reports of all privately-owned buildings in Mumbai over 30 years of age, as mandated by section 353 (B) of Mumbai Municipal Corporation, Act of 1888. The reports, to be compiled by architects registered with BMC, had to be submitted to the civic body within 30 days.

"After the notice was published, people were finding it tough to find auditors registered with BMC who could perform the appraisal. In many cases, we also found that residents had paid architects and engineers for structural audit certificates to avoid vacating their buildings if declared unfit for living in. This is dangerous as the civic body, then, does not have an accurate account of the dangerous and dilapidated buildings in the city," said a senior BMC official.

According to the corporation's disaster management cell, of 959 highly dangerous and dilapidated buildings identified prior to the start of this monsoon season, over 60 per cent were privately-owned (606). A large number of these, around 89 or 15 per cent, were registered in the L-ward comprising Kurla alone.

Though the civic administration claims that all 155 dilapidated structures in its own possession have been vacated, civic officials say the MMC Act of 1888 is only advisory in nature for dealing with privately-owned buildings.

"While residents (landlord or flat-owners) must conduct structural audits of private buildings over 30 years old, and follow-up audits after every 10 years, as per the laws, there are no provisions for penalising defaulters. This reduces our ability to effectively guard against fatal building collapses. It is a social issue when dealing with privately-owned dilapidated buildings as we cannot force people out of their homes. Their transit accommodation has to be acquired privately," the official said.

However, civic officials are also seeking legal backing through the National Disaster Management Act, 2005, for vacating citizens from highly dangerous and dilapidated private structures.

 


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