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Relevance: GS-III Disaster Management; GS-II Government Policies & Federal Structure Source: NBC 2016 (BIS); NDMA Guidelines; June 2026 reporting

1 · What happened

In June 2026, two horrific fires exposed the deep flaws in India’s urban buildings. A fire at a Bed & Breakfast in Malviya Nagar, Delhi killed 21 people. A few weeks later, a blaze at a commercial building in Aliganj, Lucknow killed at least 18 people, mostly young students.

Both tragedies shared a terrifying similarity: electronic locks became death traps. When the fire caused a power cut, biometric doors and sensor gates jammed shut, locking people inside. With only one staircase acting like a chimney for toxic smoke, victims had to jump from windows or slide down TV cables to escape.

2 · Why Indian buildings become fire traps

Building safety in India fails for three main reasons: flawed architectural design (like single staircases and flammable exteriors), weak national rules that are only suggestions, and poor local enforcement where illegal commercial buildings operate freely on residential plots.

The Rulebook
NBC 2016, Part 4
The National Building Code (NBC) is India’s master guide for safe construction. Part 4 dictates fire safety, requiring things like staircases that can withstand fire for at least 120 minutes.
The Solution
Compartmentation
A smart design trick that divides a building into fire-resistant zones using special walls and doors. This stops the fire from spreading quickly, buying crucial time for rescue.
The Design Flaw
Glass Facades & Chimney Stairs
Modern buildings love using glass and cheap aluminum panels (ACP). These catch fire easily and help flames climb the building. Meanwhile, a single, poorly ventilated staircase sucks smoke upwards like a chimney.
The Modern Danger
The Electronic Lock Trap
A deadly new trend. When a fire cuts the power, high-tech biometric doors and sensor gates lock shut permanently, turning normal exits into unbreakable walls.

  • Why enforcement is weak: Fire safety is handled by local municipalities (under the Constitution’s Twelfth Schedule). This means the excellent rules in the NBC are just suggestions until a State government officially writes them into local law.
  • The danger of narrow streets: Fire trucks need wide roads to operate. In crowded cities, illegal parking and narrow lanes severely delay rescues. This is fatal, as a room can reach “flashover” (where everything instantly ignites) in just 5-10 minutes.
  • Illegal buildings are the root cause: The Lucknow building was legally a residential plot but was illegally running commercial businesses. It survived a 2016 demolition order and operated unsafely for 12 years.
  • The Fix: We need mandatory, independent fire audits (no more builders checking themselves), harsh penalties for missing emergency stairs, and regular fire drills in schools and public spaces.

UPSC Prelims Quick Facts
NDMA National Disaster Management Authority, chaired by the PM. It creates safety guidelines for public buildings.
Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) The body that publishes the National Building Code (NBC) for safe construction.
Flashover A deadly point in a fire (usually 5-10 minutes in) where the heat causes everything in a room to ignite at once.
ACP Sheets Aluminium Composite Panels. Commonly used on building exteriors, they are highly flammable and spread fire quickly.
Twelfth Schedule Added to the Constitution in 1992. It lists the duties of local municipalities, which importantly includes Fire Services.
Fire NOC A “No Objection Certificate” from the fire department proving a building is safe. These must be renewed regularly but often aren’t.

MCQ Practice
Q. Consider the following statements regarding fire safety rules in India:

  1. The National Building Code (NBC) 2016 is a legally binding law that applies automatically across all States in India.
  2. Part 4 of the NBC mandates safety measures like dividing buildings into fire-resistant zones (compartmentation).
  3. Under the Constitution, Fire Services are the responsibility of urban local bodies, listed in the Twelfth Schedule.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) All of the above

Answer: (b) 2 and 3 only

  • Statement 1 is Incorrect (UPSC Trap): The NBC is merely a recommendation or guideline. It only becomes law if a State government actively writes it into their local municipal rules.
  • Statement 2 is Correct: Part 4 of the NBC is entirely dedicated to fire safety, heavily emphasizing compartmentation and secondary staircases.
  • Statement 3 is Correct: The 74th Amendment (1992) added the Twelfth Schedule, which explicitly hands the responsibility of fire services to local municipalities.

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