NCA report reveals failures leading to demolition of 11-storey building in Mombasa
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A probe into the collapse and demolition of an 11-storey
building in Mombasa in April has uncovered widespread regulatory failures, including
credential renting by licensed engineers and architects, and inadequate
inspection by county officers and National Construction Authority (NCA)
officials.
These were identified as key factors behind the building’s
partial collapse and its subsequent controlled demolition by the Kenya Defence
Forces.
A multi-agency task force established by Mombasa Governor
Abdulswamad Sharrif Nassir, investigating the collapse of a building in Mombasa
that claimed one life, found fundamental design flaws, a lack of essential site
investigations, such as the absence of a geological report, and poor
professional supervision that affected the structural integrity of the
building.
The task force further revealed that the project approval
process was compromised by conflicts of interest, with county staff reviewing
projects submitted by their colleagues.
There was also a lack of standard checklists, peer reviews,
and discrepancies between county records and National Construction Authority
data.
Beyond the architects and engineers, culpability extended to
the building developer, contractors lacking technical capacity, unlicensed
operators, and a county officer who facilitated procedural shortcuts and
regulatory bypasses.
"We shall ensure that people who are building in
Mombasa are prosecuted because that is endangering people's lives,” Nassir
said.
On April 9, following a multi-agency assessment, the
building at Kilifi Corner, Fayaz Estate in Mombasa, was declared structurally
unfit due to severe foundational damage exacerbated by unauthorised borehole
drilling, causing ground floor columns to collapse by about three meters.
A KDF team oversaw a successful controlled
demolition using explosives. The building, which had developed dangerous
cracks, was brought down safely to prevent imminent collapse.
The task force has recommended strict penalties for
credential renting, mandatory disclosure of conflicts of interest, and
compulsory peer reviews for complex or high-risk projects to prevent future
tragedies.


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