A century-old, five-storey residential building collapsed today in the congested Bhendi Bazar area of south Mumbai, killing at least 19 people and wounding 12 others, officials said.

They were declared dead at the state-run J J hospital, where they were taken after being pulled out of the debris, as rescue teams with heavy machinery continued to look for survivors of the crash, a senior police official said.

30 feared trapped

About 30 others are still feared trapped under the mounds of concrete and iron rods.

The process of identifying the bodies is on. At least 12 people injured in the incident were carried out on stretchers and rushed to the JJ Hospital in ambulances that faced difficulty in navigating the narrow streets due to the crowed that had gathered around the place.

The official said five fire services personnel and an NDRF jawan also suffered injuries during the rescue operations. They have also been shifted to the JJ hospital.

Fire services officials said nine families lived in the dilapidated Husaini Building. The building also housed a play school but children had not arrived when the tragedy occurred.

The building, mostly housing lower-middle class families, was located in the Muslim-dominated Pakmodia Street close to the JJ Hospital.

The building, which also had six godowns on the ground floor, crumbled at around 8.30 am. It is not clear yet if the heavy rains that inundated Mumbai this week weakened the building. What remained of the 117-year-old structure was a large mound of concrete rubble and steel rods.

Rescue workers clambered up the mound and banged large concrete slabs with hammers to reach underneath and pull out survivors and bodies. Cranes and bulldozers were also deployed to scoop up the debris. Residents helped with bare hands.

Solatium

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis visited the spot and announced a solatium of ₹5 lakh each for the next of kin of the deceased. He also said that the entire medical expenses of those injured will be borne by the state government.

“The exact number of trapped people cannot be known immediately,” Deputy Commissioner of Police (Zone 1) Manoj Sharma said.

“Our priority is to pull out at the earliest those trapped under the rubble of the dilapidated building,” said state Industries Minister Subhash Desai, who is also the guardian minister for Mumbai. “Once the rescue work gets over, the government will conduct a probe to ascertain the factors behind the building collapse. Strict action will be taken against those found guilty,” he told reporters.

Revenue Minister Chandrakant Patil and a host of local politicians and corporators also visited the site.

The incident occurred two days after the city was pummelled by torrential rains, which may have caused damage to the building.

Some residents said about 40 people belonging to nine families lived in crammed rooms in the structure, which was declared “unsafe” by the Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (MHADA).

The Saifee Burhani Upliftment Trust (SBUT), which was to have undertaken redevelopment of the 117-year-old structure, said the building housed a total of 13 tenants – 12 residential and one commercial.