Updated On: 15 October, 2023 06:41 AM IST | Mumbai | Arpika Bhosale
With circulation, light and ventilation guidelines violated in the construction of properties built under the state’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority scheme, desperate residents turn to fans and ACs that overload electrical circuits. The result is a surefire disaster in the making

A fire broke out at an SRA building in Goregaon West on October 6, killing seven people including two minors. The building was constructed in 2006 and did not have a fire-fighting system, according to reports. Pic/Getty Images
As soon as you step into the 12-storey building no. 7 in the E wing of the Slum Rehabilitation Authority’s Premier Complex in Kurla West, the stench of urine hits you like a sledgehammer. The walls of the dusty stairwell are covered in black soot, and the fire duct that runs through the middle of the stairs all the way to the last floor, is also badly charred.
On September 15, this building escaped a near tragedy, when a fire broke out in the meter box on the ground floor, quickly spreading to the wiring on the upper floors.