
Shabby buildings, indifferent residents
By Nusrat Nasarullah
This public interest advertisement from the Karachi Building Control Authority has been engaging one’s attention since the day it appeared, July 7. Now that the newspapers are carrying supplements on an “international housing industry exhibition” which has begun in town, one is compelled to wonder whether any action has been taken by the KBCA.
Let me first tell you what that KBCA advertisement was about. It was an attempt to make the city look better — to give a measure of aesthetics and discipline to the state of housing in town. The KBCA reminded in its advertisement that “this is your city. Preserve its built environment.”
I am not sure whether the text of the advertisement (rather mediocre in its presentation) was even read by the general public. It read thus “It has been observed that façade/elevation of multi-storey buildings are not being maintained properly by the residents, where leakage/seepage in sewerages/ sanitary lines has deteriorated. Some of the poor construction signs expose substandard construction material and poor workmanship. Builders and residents associations of multi-storey buildings are hereby advised to inspect their structures to rectify the defects and repair the sewerages /sanitary lines properly, they should remove sign boards, sun shades, etc and maintain the façade/elevation of multi-storey buildings with proper external painting in accordance with the approved buildings plan”.
The KBCA warned that “in case of non-compliance by the residents, association, action will be taken in accordance with rules and regulations of cooperative societies. In case of any defect on construction towards structure or fixture/fittings reported within one year of completion, action will also be initiated against the builder, the licensed architect and the licensed engineer in accordance with Section-12(9) of Sindh Building Control Ordinance 1979 and amended up to date.”
Indeed there is much to reflect in this text, and there is much more that reflects on the city of Karachi. Keep in mind not just the mediocrity of the general look of the city, but also its poverty when it is a matter of overall aesthetics. In fact with reference to this city’s appearance, a citizen with a sensitive eye contends that when it comes to the outer view of apartments, there is not one well-maintained complex in the city. Even the expensive and posh apartments are poorly kept from the outside, while from the inside they are “able to transport the individual into a world removed from the realities of Karachi, and this society.”
Then he went on to observe with bitterness that while individual houses in the city’s residential areas, as well as the individual multi-storey buildings are modern, stylish, expensive, and have all the attributes of affluence, the localities they live in are in bad shape. They suffer from infrastructure neglect, and the nonchalance of the residents (be they owners or tenants). They have all the shortcomings that have been listed in the KBCA advertisement and even more. It implies that residents are unwilling to pay the costs of maintenance for a variety of reasons.
It is shocking and deplorable to witness the manner and extent to which residents resist or completely refuse to pay their dues, for facilities they fully use or even misuse. It is, evidently, not just a matter of money, it is a question of attitude, and ethics, emphasizes a housewife who is disgusted with the way in which apartment residents dodge the collectors of maintenance charges. It is equally relevant to mention here the “politics” that takes place in many of these residents associations which not only leads to stoppage of work but also causes poor quality of maintenance, says one Karachiite who has been living in upper class apartments for almost two decades. However, it is a welcome indicator of awareness that the KBCA has at least issued an advertisement on this very vital subject, one odd aspect of the text is that it is without any time scale, schedule or deadline. Karachiites, in cases where the advertisement has been noticed, wonder why this silence. Is it deliberate? How long does the KBCA intend to wait?
Just a thought about what action ever has been taken by the KBCA or local governments in the past on this score crosses the mind. Probably nothing or not enough! Hence if public views this KBCA notice with scepticism wouldn’t be surprising.
It is very easy and customary for Karachiites to be cynical about such efforts to improve the “façade/elevation” (as described by the KBCA) of multi-storey buildings in the Karachi. Let us face it. Very many of these buildings not only appear disgracefully shabby, but they are in disturbing stages of disrepair and prolonged neglect.
I am distracted here by a news story which appeared this week in an English daily about the shabby state of apartments facing the Clifton beach, what is regarded as an affluent part of the city. And the blame went to the Clifton Cantonment Board (CCB). The contrast that these spacious apartments present to some of the development and uplift work that has been going on in this locality is sharp and disturbing.
Equally disturbing is the way in which there is lacking awareness, and therefore necessary action, for keeping multi-storey apartments in decent shape. Residents spend generously and lavishly on their lifestyles and the upkeep of the interiors. But when it comes to paying their monthly dues to their associations, or sharing costs for collective conveniences they avoid doing so. And the excuses that apartment occupants come up with often reflect a very selfish attitude, says an apartment resident. “They don’t realize that there are those who pay, and keep the operations and systems going. Those who don’t pay their subscriptions regularly are impediments of all sorts,” remarked Tariq Zuberi, who resides in one of the largest apartment complexes in Gulistan-i-Jauhar.
Sometimes the disappointment and frustration that come from looking at the state of our buildings does make us wonder whether there will ever come a day, even in the distant future when Karachiites will realize the civic responsibility they have towards the environment they breathe in.
One hopes that if the KBCA does take any action, it will share with public the details which would make an interesting reading, and revealing too. It would be interesting to see how the rules are going to be implemented!
Finally, I have glanced through the newspaper supplement brought out to mark this international housing industry exhibition, which reminds us that there is a shortage of one million apartments and houses in Karachi. This is a very worrying context. For all the policies and efforts that are being made houses and apartments are becoming still more unaffordable. And in a society where becoming rich quick is the driving force and a dream that people chase, there isn’t any good news likely soon on this front. Housing loans that Pakistani and foreign banks sell don’t appear to make a real difference.

