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MALTATODAY 4 March 2020 Midweek

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3 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 4 MARCH 2020 NEWS Hamrun house collapse CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 The project was given a planning permit on 31 January, which was also accompa- nied by clearance from the Building Reg- ulations Office to start excavation works. The development is the responsibility of MCZMC Developers Ltd run by Malcolm Mallia. MaltaToday revealed that the ar- chitect who certified the Santa Venera construction site at the centre of a col- lapsed building as safe, is a shareholder in the company behind the development. Architect Roderick Camilleri turns out to be a minority shareholder in MCZMC Developers Ltd run by Malcolm Mallia, a council member of the Malta Developers Association. The construction site which abuts on two roads in Hamrun is adjacent to the house and showroom that collapsed on Monday afternoon burying a woman un- derneath the rubble. Camilleri drew up the method statement for the excavation works and would have had to evaluate the risks involved under new rules approved last year, following a series of building collapses. But Camilleri is not simply the project architect but according to the Malta Busi- ness Registry a shareholder in the compa- ny behind the development, raising ques- tions over a potential conflict of interest. Camilleri is one of seven shareholders, with a 10% stake to his name. He is not a director and his shareholding is probably one way of getting paid for his services. The other shareholders are Malcolm Mallia, Matthias Mallia, Elton-Joseph Caruana, Amanda Muscat, Christopher Zarb and Simon Zarb. All of these are company directors. Excavation works on the construction site started last month after the develop- ment permit was granted in January this year. In the section on risks involved of the method statement for excavation works, Camilleri wrote: "The adjacent proper- ties are low lying structures, and as a re- sult there are no major loads imposed on the rock surface for the time being. Con- sequently, the chance of any unplanned collapse of the third party structures is a minimum." The development covers a site measur- ing 1,326sq.m that consisted of a series of dilapidated stores at ground level behind a large garden. The six-storey development consists of four shops and overlying apartments and includes two basement garages for 59 cars. The Building Regulation Office issued a clearance for the development on 31 Jan- uary following the presentation of a meth- od statement by the developer. Photos of the disaster area show that it was the side wall of the building abutting onto the excavated site that collapsed, pulling down the internal ceiling and roof. Stricter rules governing demolition and excavation were introduced last year after three major incidents that involved build- ing collapses next to excavation sites. However, civil society groups like Graf- fitti and Flimkien għal Ambjent Aħjar denounced the rules as cosmetic and do- ing nothing to curb the industry's rush to build. Architect has 10% shareholding in company behind Hamrun development 'Chance of any unplanned collapse of third party structures is a minimum' - Architect's method statement for excavation works

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