A spate of recent incidents has bared the shameful state of public infrastructure in India today. The collapse of a portion of a canopy at the departure area in New Delhi airport, which claimed one life and led to cancellation of flights, after a downpour on Friday was shocking but sadly not an exception. In a matter of days, airports at Jabalpur and Rajkot saw two similar cave-ins. From megacities to mofussil towns, the spread of a crumbling infrastructure is secular. As many as five under-construction bridges collapsed in Bihar alone, within a span of nine days. Such examples are unacceptably routine and tend to provoke anger only when they lead to loss of lives, such as the Kolkata flyover collapse in 2016 or the bridge cave-in at Morbi, Gujarat, in 2022. These betray troubling patterns such as attempts to cut corners, use of substandard material, lack of maintenance and sheer incompetence.
Technical failures are also too frequent, including in the biggest urban centres. In Delhi, for instance, the two-year-old Pragati Maidan tunnel, a 1.3km-long structure built at a cost of Rs 777 crore, was closed for three days due to waterlogging following Friday’s torrential rain. Earlier this year, the Delhi government issued a notice to construction firm Larsen and Toubro
Shoddy public infrastructure is nothing new in India