HomeLatestMHADA To Survey 13000 Cessed Buildings Mumbai

MHADA To Survey 13000 Cessed Buildings Mumbai

Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (MHADA) has announced plans to conduct a comprehensive structural audit of all 13,091 cessed buildings in Mumbai ahead of the 2026 monsoon season. The initiative marks a departure from previous years when only a fraction of aging structures were formally assessed, signalling a more proactive approach to mitigating monsoon-related building hazards.

Cessed buildings, most of which are over eight decades old, have long posed risks to residents due to structural wear, inadequate maintenance, and overcrowding. Urban planners and industry experts note that periodic audits are crucial in a densely populated city like Mumbai, where even minor structural failures can have catastrophic consequences. Last year, only around 1,000 cessed buildings underwent detailed structural evaluation, leaving large sections of the city’s historic housing stock potentially vulnerable. The planned audit will be conducted by four separate agencies over a 2–3 month period, with priority given to structures exhibiting early signs of distress. According to MHADA estimates, the exercise is projected to cost approximately ₹40 crore, averaging up to ₹90,000 per building depending on size and tenancy levels. Once completed, officials anticipate a substantial rise in the number of buildings classified as dangerous or extremely dangerous, reflecting both the scale of the city’s ageing infrastructure and the authority’s intensified monitoring efforts.

This move is part of a broader strategy by MHADA to encourage redevelopment of cessed properties. By systematically identifying at-risk buildings, the authority aims to facilitate safer living conditions while also creating opportunities for responsible urban renewal. Redevelopment of cessed structures, when executed with community consent, can enhance building safety, improve density management, and introduce more climate-resilient construction methods in Mumbai’s core neighbourhoods. The decision follows a legal and regulatory context that has shaped cessed building management in the city. Notices issued in 2024 to nearly a thousand dangerous buildings in South Mumbai triggered court interventions, delaying redevelopment under the MHADA Act. With recent legal clarifications and consent mechanisms in place, the authority is now positioned to implement large-scale audits and redevelopment initiatives while balancing the rights of landowners and tenants.

Urban affairs analysts suggest that MHADA’s move could also influence private developers and housing cooperatives by reinforcing the importance of structural integrity, maintenance transparency, and risk mitigation in high-density residential environments. By prioritising safety audits ahead of monsoon season, the city may reduce human and economic losses associated with building collapses while fostering a more accountable approach to real estate redevelopment. As Mumbai braces for the upcoming monsoon, the comprehensive survey signals a shift toward systematic, citywide infrastructure oversight, providing residents, planners, and policymakers with critical data to manage urban risk more effectively and to support a sustainable, resilient housing framework.

MHADA To Survey 13000 Cessed Buildings Mumbai
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