Latest news with #KeralaBuildingRules

The Hindu
04-07-2025
- The Hindu
Kerala government to form panel for safety audit of decades-old State-funded hospitals
The Kerala government will constitute a high-level committee to examine the structural stability of decades-old public buildings, chiefly State-funded hospitals, in the aftermath of the deadly collapse that claimed the life of a 52-year-old woman, Bindu, and injured two others at the Government Medical College Hospital (MCH) campus in Kottayam on Thursday. Officials stated that the government would work out the modalities of the building safety audit scheme at a meeting of Ministers and top officials next week. They noted that the government was aware that most State-funded hospitals were decades-old and many had been constructed before the Kerala Building Rules (KBR) came into force. Hence, many did not fully conform to fire safety and search and rescue norms, making access for emergency responders difficult in times of distress. Officials stated that the ministerial audit would encompass all aspects of hospital safety. Meanwhile, the government has assigned the District Collector of Kottayam to submit a preliminary inquiry report on the MCH incident by July 11. Officials privy to the inquiry process said Public Works Department (PWD) engineers would report to the Collector on the cause of the accident and the buildings' general structural safety. They would also conduct a safety audit of other buildings on the campus, including student hostels, canteens and elevated corridors linking different buildings. The Fire and Rescue Services department and the Electrical Inspectorate would aid the PWD's audit. An official said the north end of the building, which collapsed, housed toilets. However, the MCH administration had closed the facilities after it had constructed a new array of modern toilets on the building's south side. However, it reopened the old toilets on the south side after patients and bystanders complained that the new block was too far away from the post-operative ward.


New Indian Express
23-06-2025
- Business
- New Indian Express
Kerala to revise 31 rules to attract more investment
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: A high-level meeting chaired by Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has decided to amend 31 different rules to make the state more-investment friendly. The amendments will help the state realise the investment proposals received at the Invest Kerala Global Summit (IKGS). The meeting also discussed the formation of a task force under the local self-government department for the speedy implementation of proposals. The revision or amendments are proposed to the rules related to local self-government institutions, departments of revenue, power, environment, labour, agriculture and higher education, said an official release. Relaxations will be made in the rule pertaining to road width requirement prescribed in the Kerala Building Rules, 2019. The maximum area prescribed for commercial buildings in category-II panchayats will be enhanced. Changes will be made in the documents required while applying for building permits on leased lands. Guidelines to regularise constructions made under the Kerala MSME Facilitation Act 2019 will be revised. Parking guidelines for resorts and hotels in the tourism and hospitality sector will also be revised. For this, conditions for assessing building area will be changed. The meeting decided to expedite the unique thandaper (title deed or ownership document) initiative to ensure transparent and efficient land utilisation. Applications for land conversion for project proposals received at the IKGS will be prioritised. A circular will be issued to define the powers of agricultural officers in land category change.


The Hindu
11-06-2025
- The Hindu
GEC alumni team counters ‘misleading reports' on collapsed building
Against the backdrop of the recent collapse of a commercial building in the city, a group of alumni from the Government Engineering College (GEC), Thrissur, has come forward with a fact-finding report to counter what it termed as 'misleading and damaging' information that wrongly implicated the college's structural engineering experts. Several reports had suggested that the collapsed building had received a structural safety certificate from the GEC's Civil Engineering department, but documents and inspection records reviewed by the alumni reveal this claim as incorrect. According to the team, the building had in fact been declared unsafe by a faculty member from the GEC on August 17, 2024 following a site inspection conducted in response to a request from the Thrissur Corporation. The inspection was triggered by an incident the previous day, when glass panels from the first floor of the building shattered and fell, prompting the corporation to issue a formal letter requesting an urgent assessment. The inspection report clearly stated that the building was not structurally sound, with supporting technical reasoning. Furthermore, on September 28, during a visit by a court-appointed advocate commission— based on a Kerala High Court order dated September 12 —the same GEC faculty member reiterated in person that the building was unsafe. The team said the reports mistakenly referred to a safety certificate issued for the adjacent building that had been certified as safe on November 11. It was this certificate that had been misrepresented in public discourse. The Government Engineering College, Thrissur, has long been authorised under the Kerala Building Rules to carry out structural assessments. Faculty members from the Civil Engineering department, especially those with postgraduate specialisation in structural engineering, have regularly served on expert panels formed by municipal bodies and even the Kerala High Court, the report says.