Anarkali Building Blaze (Apr 1 2025): why Delhi’s latest fire is a red-flag for Jaina Tower
Quick facts
Where/When: Anarkali Building & adjoining DDA Shopping Complex, Jhandewalan, Central Delhi – afternoon of 1 April 2025
Scale: 4-/5-storey commercial block fully gutted; ~25 fire-tenders deployed; 30-plus parked vehicles destroyed – yet no casualties reported (www.ndtv.com, Hindustan Times, The Indian Express)
Probable trigger: spark in an AC-compressor/short-circuit on a makeshift rooftop shed, fanned rapidly by high winds (Hindustan Times, The Indian Express)
Status: blaze brought under control in about four hours; building declared structurally unsafe; investigation under DFS & Delhi Police
Watch on YouTube
What went wrong?
No operational fire-fighting gear – eyewitnesses saw firefighters use cranes to douse upper floors; nothing inside the complex seemed to work when flames erupted. (www.ndtv.com)
Congested frontage – falling embers set parked cars ablaze, multiplying heat and toxic smoke. (ABP Live)
Electrical overload – AC units running on temporary wiring caused the initial blast, according to DFS officials. (The Indian Express)
Every one of these points is precisely what Delhi Fire Service audits flag before issuing or renewing a Fire No-Objection Certificate (NOC).
Why Fire NOCs matter
Fire-safety checkpoint
What DFS looks for
What failed at Anarkali
Multiple protected exits
clear, well-marked stairwells
exits choked by renovation material
Certified wiring & load charts
insulated cabling, MCBs, earthing
suspected short-circuit & AC blast
On-site suppression
hydrants, extinguishers, sprinklers
firefighters relied on external water cannons
Periodic drills & signage
occupant training, floor plans
haphazard evacuation via public alarm
A valid NOC forces owners to install, test, and document each of these items annually. Skip it, and insurance claims, occupancy permissions and even basic utilities can be withdrawn.
Déjà vu for Jaina Tower
Your own documentation shows:
Lift shafts converted into offices (701 C, 501 A) blocking vertical escape routes.
Open MCB panels and ad-hoc meter relocations along public corridors.
Illegal add-ons over 30 years with no updated completion certificate, let alone a DFS clearance.
If a small rooftop shed and one AC unit could cripple a concrete block in Jhandewalan, imagine the scenario in Jaina Tower’s maze of retro-fitted shops and closed shafts. The legal & financial fallout would be brutal:
Legal sealing/demolition: DFS can request DDA to seal floors that lack mandated fire systems.
Insurance refusal: Insurers routinely reject claims where NOC is absent or lapsed.
Tenant desertion & asset devaluation: post-fire closures drive rents and capital values down overnight.
Action plan for residents & owners
Commission an independent fire audit—use any DFS-empanelled agency; submit findings to the society within 15 days.
Fast-track NOC renewal: schematic drawings, load certificates and hydrant tests must precede the application.
Clear egress routes: reverse lift-lobby encroachments and remove flammable signage or storage.
Upgrade electrical infrastructure: replace exposed meter boxes with sealed, DFS-approved panels; install ELCB & surge protection.
Conduct quarterly drills—fire isn’t just a compliance line-item; practice saves lives.
Sources consulted
NDTV video report & text story on April 1 2025 (www.ndtv.com)
Hindustan Times PTI dispatch, “Massive fire at building in Delhi’s Jhandewalan…” (Hindustan Times)
The Hindu social feed (Threads), 01 Apr 2025 update on Jhandewalan blaze (Threads)
Indian Express city-desk coverage, updated 02 Apr 2025 (The Indian Express)
ABP Live compilation quoting ANI & DFS officials (ABP Live)
Each of these outlets underscores the same lesson: fire codes only work when enforced before, not after, disaster strikes. Let the Anarkali inferno be the final wake-up call—secure a Fire NOC for Jaina Tower now.