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In 2009, Belapur
resident Chandra K Ravi booked a flat in Tata’s Shubh Grih, a budget housing
project at Boisar, after the developer promised delivery in December 2011. Four
months past the due date, Chandra discovered the project had been delayed for
an uncertain period.
 
“I planned to shift
from my current rented house to my own and get my children admitted into a new
school. But everything has gone haywire despite paying all my instalments on
time,” said Chandra.
 
In 2008, when
Kailash Patil booked a flat in Lodha’s Casa Universe project at Thane, the
developer committed himself to a 2011 deadline. Today, the building is only
half-done, and according to Patil, it will take at least two more years.
“Because of the developer’s fault, I am having to pay both the EMI and rent,”
Patil told DNA.
 
Chandra feels
developers should be held responsible for such hold-ups. “If a buyer delays the
instalment payment, developers are quick to charge 18-22% interest on the
delayed payment. They too should be held responsible and asked to pay us rent
for the delay they cause,” he said.
 
Confirming that
many projects were late by six months to over three years, managing director
Pankaj Kapoor of Liases Foras, a real-estate research firm, said 65% of the
4,091 projects launched over the last three years have been deferred. Kapoor
revealed that instead of spending the initial booking amount on the building’s
construction, most builders use it to buy chunks of land. “As construction work
progresses, the builder sells the remaining flats at a higher cost and again
routes the money to different projects,” he added.
 
“While the glut in
the real-estate market results in fewer sales, the tightening of lending rules
by banks makes the requisite amount unavailable. So housing projects are slowed
in a deliberate move by builders,” alleged Kapoor, adding that only after the
market recovers enough to boost sales will the construction activity pick up.
 
When contacted,
Anand Gupta, treasurer of Builder Association of India, admitted to the delay
of projects by certain builders, but blamed it on a sluggish market. “Chief
minister Prithviraj Chavan is equally responsible as his government did not
approve proposals on time, thus causing delay in delivery.” Gupta added,“If the
government compensates us, we will compensate buyers.”