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Hospital declared unfit, sealed

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The New Indian Express 04.02.2010

Hospital declared unfit, sealed

 

HYDERABAD: The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) has sealed the unauthorised fifth floor and took possession of the mortgaged portion of the second floor of the Park Super Speciality Hospital at Somajiguda that caught fire on Tuesday.

The building was constructed with deviations and the fifth floor was constructed without permission.

The building owner/occupier has been directed not to use the premises till the unauthorised and deviated portions are removed and necessary occupancy certificate is obtained from the Municipal Commissioner. He will also be asked to fulfil all the conditions of the sanctioned plan and comply with the fire safety requirements.

GHMC officials told Expresso that owner of the building C Damodar Reddy had obtained permission for construction of the hospital building consisting of a cellar, sub-cellar and Ground+4 floors in Pr.No. 6-3-903/A/B situated at Somajiguda.

During construction, the builder deviated from the sanctioned plan by projecting a balcony on the western and northern sides and also constructing one extra floor.

Civic officials visited the building on Wednesday and noticed that it was liable for action under the provisions of the AP Municipal Laws & AP Urban Areas (Development) (Amendment) Act 2008 and HMC Act 1955.

The owner had mortgaged over 10 percent of the total built-up area, admeasuring 240.04 sq.mtr, on the second floor to the Commissioner prior to construction as a security against violation of the terms and conditions of the sanctioned plan.

Meanwhile, Mayor Banda Karthika Reddy along with Municipal Commissioner Sameer Sharma visited the Park Hospital. They also called on the fire victims undergoing treatment at the adjacent Yashoda Hospital.

The Mayor directed officials to initiate suitable action against all those violating the sanctioned building plans.

Last Updated on Thursday, 04 February 2010 08:01
 

Flood, sweat and tears

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Hindustan Times 03.02.2010

Flood, sweat and tears

It took the near-drowning of a city and several deaths for Mumbai to acknowledge the deteriorating existence of what was once an efficient stormwater drain — the Mithi river.

This 17.8-km river — a confluence of the tail water of the Vihar, Powai and Tulsi lakes that flows through Powai, Saki Naka, Kurla, Kalina, Vakola Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC), Dharavi and Mahim — served as a natural drainage system, flushing out the city’s excess water into the Arabian Sea. Over the years, due to rampant encroachments on its banks and unchecked toxic discharges, the river has been rendered a polluted sewer, blamed for the floods of July 26, 2005.

The river is especially hazardous in the monsoon as it brings polluted waters into Mumbai during the high tide and contains direct discharges of untreated sewage, waste water from unauthorised settlements as well as sludge oil and industrial effluents. Animal waste from nearby cattle sheds is dumped into the river. The organic waste, sludge and garbage have reduced the carrying capacity of the river — raising the risk of floods every time it rains hard — that is now a threat to the marine and avian population in and around it, not to mention the danger it poses to those who live near it or on its banks.

The 2005 floods stirred the authorities into action and recommendations to deepen and de-silt the Mithi, made by the Central Water Power Research Station (CWPRS) in 2006, have been implemented by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) and the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA). The BMC was assigned to improve 11.8 kilometres of the river, while MMRDA took charge of the remaining 6 kilometres.

Now, three monsoons and approximately Rs 122 crore later, the de-silting and deepening is nearly complete. However, several blocks obstruct its transformation from an environmental hazard to an ecological wonder.

As per the recommendations of the CWPRS, the river was to be widened to 100 metres. MMRDA has not been able to undertake widening near Kapadia Nagar in Kurla and Valmiki Nagar in BKC due to residential colonies. “We have widened the river to 64 metres in this area, which will be sufficient,” Gaikwad said.

On Tuesday, MMRDA chief Ratnakar Gaikwad said the the Mithi clean-up will be completed by the year-end.

MMRDA Chief Engineer P.S. Mandpe, who’s in charge of the Mithi project, said: “Currently, we are only working on a pilot project to beautify 900 metres of the Mithi bank behind the MMRDA office at BKC.” He said at the moment there are no private parties involved in the beautification project and the work was being done by a contractor.

Uma Adusumili, project director, Mithi River Development and Protection Authority, added: “As and when public lands are available, both implementing agencies will work to beautify the area around the Mithi. As of now, some greening is being undertaken at BKC. But we hope to build facilities that will allow people to sit by the river and enjoy the view.”

However, the view of a sludgy, toxic river might not appeal to the public. While the Mithi’s water holding capacity has increased due to de-silting, the river is still a hotbed of pollutants and untreated sewage. Adusumili said: “The work done by MMRDA and BMC was only a short-term plan to increase the river’s capacity and to secure its dimensions. The Maharashtra Pollution Control Board is set to undertake a long-term city-wide sewage treatment and disposal project under which the Mithi will be treated.”

Environmental activists criticised the authorities’ apathy towards the protection of Mithi’s mangroves. Rishi Agarwal, of the Mangrove Society of India, said: “The authorities have never involved environmentalists or citizens in their plans for the Mithi. Instead of taking a holistic approach to the conservation of the river and the biodiversity it supports, they have employed short-term measures.”

In response to a public interest litigation filed in 2007 by businessman and activist Jagdish Gandhi, who objected to a retaining wall on the Vakola nullah that cut off the supply of the Mithi’s saline water essential to the growth of mangroves, the Bombay High Court recently appointed a three-member expert panel to look into the matter. But Gandhi said: “By the time, the matter was brought to the notice of the court, the wall was already built. We want ecological justifications, not engineering constructions.”

Last Updated on Wednesday, 03 February 2010 09:23
 

No permanent system to demolish weak buildings

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The Hindu 03.02.2010

No permanent system to demolish weak buildings

N.J. Nair

Permits given without verifying strength of buildings

 


Many buildings ‘lean’ due to structural defects

Civic bodies lack qualified engineers to assess safety


Thiruvananthapuram: Absence of a permanent mechanism for demolishing old and structurally defective buildings has exposed the chinks in the official system that controls and regulates the construction sector in the State.

Official sources told The Hindu here that the local self-government institutions which issued building construction and renovation permits did not have qualified persons to assess the safety of the structures. Clearances were given without verifying the strength and fitness of the buildings and the layout proposals.

Each civic body should ideally have a qualified structural engineer whose certification should be made mandatory for renovation and reconstruction of buildings, sources said. In metropolitan cities such as Mumbai, the civic bodies have a system for identifying unsafe structures and certifying them as unfit for occupation.

A number of buildings in the State reportedly ‘lean’ to one side from structural defects. These include residential buildings, hospitals and places of mass assemblage. A majority of them are within the limits of the Corporations.

This points to the immediacy of the need for having a permanent monitoring mechanism under the civic bodies for identifying unsafe buildings.

The dilapidated buildings should be demolished and those that can be salvaged should be strengthened under strict supervision, sources said.

Instances of adding more floors to buildings on old and weak foundations are aplenty in the State. After securing permission for constructing two or three floors, additions are made without seeking the mandatory approval. Once the weight becomes unbearable, the structure will lean and even crumble.

Quite often, the civic bodies fail to initiate action against such unauthorised constructions and in some places, they issue door numbers too to them in gross violation of the rules.

Local Self-Government Department sources said that amendments would be made soon to the Kerala Municipal Building Rules to get the structural strength and safety of buildings ascertained. The latest amendments had covered the safety norms to a considerable extent. Sufficient changes may be made, if needed.

This will be strictly observed in the case of the existing as well as the new buildings. The department will explore the option of entrusting the local bodies with the phasing out of old, dilapidated and unsafe structures, sources said.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 03 February 2010 05:33
 


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