Saket Metro Station
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Related Articles from SNS
Watch: Dramatic moment Saket building crumbles into massive dust cloud
A video has captured the terrifying moment a three-storey commercial building near Saket Metro station in south Delhi collapsed within seconds, disappearing into a massive cloud of dust. The footage shows dust initially billowing from the upper floors of the building, bystanders and residents can be seen gathered outside. Moments later, the entire structure suddenly gives way, crashing to the ground and sending a thick wall of dust and debris sweeping through the area.
4 dead in south Delhi building collapse
At least four people were killed and several others injured after a four-storey building collapsed near Saket Metro Station in south Delhi on Saturday evening, triggering a massive rescue operation. 10 people had been pulled out from the rubble late evening as teams from the Delhi Fire Service, NDRF and other agencies continued search efforts at the site in Saidulajab. The Delhi Fire Service received the distress call at 7.44 pm, and dispatched emergency units to the site.
5-storey building collapses in south Delhi’s Mehrauli; several feared trapped
Several people are feared trapped under the debris after a five-storey building collapsed near Saket Metro station in south Delhi on Saturday evening The building, located on Western Marg in Saidulajab, collapsed entirely, leaving behind a massive mound of rubble, said officials according to news agency PTI. Police sources said a coaching institute operated on the ground floor of the structure, while construction work was underway on the upper floors.
No 'Delhi mein sab nahi chalta hai': After 21 deaths in Malviya Nagar fire, who is to blame?
Twenty-one people are dead. Thirteen of them were foreign nationals who had come to India seeking medical care, not a grave. And as the smoke clears over the charred shell of Flourish Stay B&B in Hauz Rani, a familiar Delhi drama is now playing out — one agency pointing fingers at another, each carefully drawing the boundary of its own responsibility just short of where the failures actually began.