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Safety concerns raised over Coastal Road promenade in Mumbai

Safety concerns raised over Coastal Road promenade in Mumbai

Time of India01-08-2025
MUMBAI: Even as the BMC is yet to formally inaugurate the coastal road promenade between Breach Candy and Worli, local residents are already flagging concerns regarding its management and safety.
Civic sources said they are awaiting a date from the chief minister's office for the opening.
During a meeting held on July 30, with Anil Kumbhare, Joint Commissioner of Police (Traffic), representatives of the Worli Residents Committee, Breach Candy Residents Forum, Napean Sea Road Citizens' Forum, and officials from the Coastal Road project put forth several suggestions.
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These included a demand for a complete no-parking policy along the coastal road, usage of designated bus bays only for pick-ups and drop-offs, restricted operating hours for the promenade to ensure safety, and limiting pedestrian access strictly through underpasses. They also stressed on the importance of actively monitoring the over 100 CCTV cameras installed along the stretch for better crowd and traffic management.
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1 dead, 30 injured in Dahi Handi festivities across Mumbai

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MUMBAI: In a little over 10 days, the fate of 27 families residing between 17th and 34th floors of the Willingdon View Cooperative Housing Society (CHS), in Tardeo, will be sealed. The residents are racing against time to get their fire safety certificate from the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), to avoid eviction. Mumbai, India. Aug 08, 2025: View of Willingdon Heights at Tradeo in South Mumbai. The Bombay High Court ordered 27 families living on the upper 18 floors to vacate their flats within three weeks, as these units do not have an Occupancy Certificate (OC). Mumbai, India. Aug 08, 2025. (Photo by Raju Shinde/HT Photo) (Raju Shinde) On August 1, the Supreme Court (SC) had declined to interfere with the Bombay High Court's (HC) directive to evict residents from these floors which neither have Occupancy Certificate (OC) nor a fire department No Objection Certificate (NOC), on August 27. Many have lived here for over a decade. 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The core issue isn't just the lack of a fire NOC, but whether the construction violated provisions of the National Building Code, which the chief fire officer (CFO) is duty-bound to enforce,' said Advocate Y P Singh. Singh referred to The Maharashtra Fire Prevention and Life Safety Measures Act, 2006, which mandates that fire NOCs be issued in alignment with the National Building Code. 'The acid test is whether those rules were violated and if so, whether such violations are being overlooked in other new buildings across Mumbai,' he said, warning that many high-rises are currently flouting fire norms. 'We're seeing 50-storey towers with only 1.5 metres of open space when the code mandates 20 metres. This shows blatant non-compliance. There needs to be a citywide audit of all fire NOCs issued. Wherever violations are found, those buildings must be evacuated,' said Singh. Willingdon Vs Campa Cola case The Campa Cola housing society, in Worli, and Willingdon View Cooperative Housing Society – both mired in cases of illegal construction – differ significantly in legal reasoning and judicial approach. HT has seen the copy of the HC order of July 15 2025, pronounced in the Willingdon case, which underscored the differences between this and the Campa Cola case. It stated that in the case of Campa Cola, the Supreme Court initially granted temporary relief to residents on humanitarian grounds, invoking Article 142 of the Constitution, which empowers the court to deliver complete justice. The case involved unauthorised floors in the housing complex that exceeded the permitted Floor Space Index (FSI). In contrast, the Willingdon View case involves the absence of fire safety NOC and a full occupation certificate, which renders the building illegal. 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