Category Archives: construction

Trump plows past concerns over East Wing demolition — and envisions an even bigger ballroom than initially planned

(CNN) — President Donald Trump has proceeded with enormous latitude as he constructs his massive new ballroom, bypassing concerns raised by preservationists and so far stopping short of seeking approval from the commission overseeing construction on federal buildings to tear down the entirety of the White House East Wing.

The ballroom is now expected to be larger than initially planned, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. The president has shown visitors two flat tabletop models, at times quizzing the room on which version they preferred: the smaller one or the larger one. Most answered that the bigger one was better, to which Trump agreed.

While it’s not clear how much larger, Trump said Wednesday that the ballroom is expected to cost a projected $300 million, seemingly in line with a larger structure. Previously, the administration had put the cost at $200 million.

The project has drawn outcry and led to questions about whether the president was within his legal authority to dismantle entire sections of the executive mansion. Not all of Trump’s own team was set on the project at the start, one source familiar with the internal conversations told CNN.

At the beginning, some aides and advisers thought it was too big of a task to undertake, and attempted to explain how difficult and lengthy the process was likely to be. But once it became clear the president wasn’t going to give up on the idea — which he’s been musing about for the better part of 15 years — everyone quickly got onboard.

The White House says it will submit plans for the ballroom construction to the National Capital Planning Commission, but insists the body doesn’t have purview over the decision to knock down the East Wing. Some former members of the panel have questioned that assessment. And one of the nation’s premier historic preservation organizations is calling for an immediate halt to the leveling of the East Wing.

But there appeared little standing in the way of the president’s decision to move ahead with the audacious, multi-year project. Now the demolition is well underway, making it seem unlikely the plans will be reversed.

“In order to do it properly, we had to take down the existing structure,” Trump said Wednesday in the Oval Office when questioned about the project. A scale model of the White House grounds with the ballroom prominently jutting out from the East Colonnade sat on the table in front of him.

He said after a “tremendous amount of study with some of the best architects in the world,” the determination was made that “really knocking it down” the East Wing would be necessary. “It was never thought of as being much,” he said. “It was a very small building.”

On Wednesday, track excavators continued their work ripping into the former home of the office of the first lady, the White House calligrapher, and some military aides. The demolition was proceeding quickly, with roughly half the structure now reduced to a grey pile of cement and twisted rebar. Staffers in those departments have been relocated to other areas on the complex.

The East Wing’s wood-paneled foyer has long been the main point of entry for visitors attending social events at the White House, as well as those going on tours of the building. The section emerged in its current form in 1942.

Officials said the rest of the East Wing is likely to be demolished by the end of the week.

In some ways, the cries of disapproval are coming too late. Renderings released by the White House in July showed the ballroom sitting atop where the East Wing used to sit, and an official press release at the time stated it would sit “where the small, heavily changed, and reconstructed East Wing currently sits.”

Trump said anyone outraged or concerned he was taking steps without being frank about his intentions were misplaced. “I haven’t been transparent? I’ve shown this to everybody that would listen,” he said in the Oval Office.

Still, images of the building torn to pieces this week have caused shock, particularly as Trump tests his authority in nearly all aspects of the presidency — not least of which is the building he lives and works in.

The project began ramping up over the summer, one source said, and weekly meetings to discuss the project began. The president himself has been involved in these meetings, which have also included Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the White House Military Office, the Secret Service, an architecture team, and other staffers internally who have been tasked with helping move the project along quickly, the source said.

The White House said in late July that McCrery Architects and its CEO James McCrery would take the lead in the design of the addition. A few days later, McCrery was spotted alongside Trump on the White House roof surveying the area on the South Grounds where the ballroom will go.

Trump’s aides were prepared for pushback on the ballroom and sought to review what was legally required to complete the project, the source said.

Ultimately, administration officials determined the White House would only need approval from the National Capital Planning Commission, which oversees federal construction projects in Washington and its neighboring states, Virginia and Maryland.

However, officials said the commission has jurisdiction only when “vertical” construction begins and does not oversee demolition.

Trump recently appointed White House staff secretary and loyalist Will Scharf to chair the commission. White House deputy Chief of Staff James Blair and another Trump aide were also appointed to the commission at the same time.

Scharf said during a meeting of the commission last month the body would eventually be involved in the project, but not until after the East Wing was demolished.

“I know the president thinks very highly of this commission, and I’m excited for us to play a role in the ballroom project when the time is appropriate for us to do so,” he said.

The commission, which is closed amid the ongoing government shutdown, was created by Congress in 1924 and is comprised of 12 members. Three are appointed by the president, along with the chairman, with the rest of the seats reserved for federal agencies, such as the National Park Service, and representatives from the District of Columbia.

Projects reviewed by the NCPC in recent years include changing the perimeter fence around the White House grounds and a tennis pavilion Trump installed during his first term. The fence, in particular, took several years before it was ultimately approved; officials said it was a necessary change because people kept jumping over the previous one and running toward the North Portico.

L. Preston Bryant Jr., who served as chairman of the NCPC for nearly a decade, described a three-stage process that typically unfolds for federal projects, beginning with early consultations that he described as collaborative.

“The Commission staff very much wants a potential project to get started on the right foot. This early consultation stage is very important,” he told CNN.

The project goes through subsequent phases — conceptual, preliminary approval, and final approval — before the process is complete.

Bryant said he couldn’t remember a time when demolition was separated from the approval process in the way the Trump White House has done.

“That was not my experience during my time at NCPC,” Bryant said. “If there’s to be demolition, that’s part of the project. The demolition element is inherent in the overall project. Demo is not separated from construction. It’s part of it.”

Rebecca Miller, the executive director of the DC Preservation League, said demolishing the East Wing before a formal submission of the ballroom plans essentially starts the project before a formal review process.

“Most concerning is that they’re just tearing down the East Wing without any public submission as to what is going to be built in its place,” she said. “And that’s where the National Capital Planning Commission, or the Commission on Fine Arts, or the public, would have their input into the design of the property, its compatibility with the White House, and how to mitigate or minimize the impact on the current historic resource.”

“We’re in this kind of zone where there’s nothing that prevents the demolition, but we’ve also not seen what the submission is,” Miller added.

Other laws and rules also appear not to apply to the White House. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the National Historic Preservation Act in 1966, which details the process by which stakeholders should be brought in for large public projects. But the law excludes the three pillars of US government — the Capitol, the Supreme Court, and the White House — from its provisions.

The Shipstead-Luce Act of 1930 also requires that alterations to buildings in the national capital area, including the White House, must be presented to the Commission of Fine Arts. The language, however, refers to buildings facing the White House and not the White House itself.

For Trump, the concerns about the new ballroom appear unconvincing.

Sitting in the newly gilded Oval Office as the machines were working away outside, he held up a pile of paper renderings showing the plans, including the Louis XIV-style interior that closely resembles the ballroom at Mar-a-Lago.

“You see it goes beautifully with the White House,” Trump proclaimed. “I mean, the mix is beautiful.”

© 2024 The-CNN-Wire™ & ©.
https://wsvn.com/news/politics/trump-plows-past-concerns-over-east-wing-demolition-and-envisions-an-even-bigger-ballroom-than-initially-planned/

Experts fear notorious Billionaires’ Row supertall could rain ‘chunks of concrete’ on NYC if cracks not addressed: report

The building is being stressed beyond what was originally intended.

There’s no sidewalk shed that can fully protect you from chunks of concrete popping off a 1,400-foot-tall structure.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/20/us-news/432-park-ave-could-rain-chunks-of-concrete-if-nyc-supertalls-cracks-not-fixed/

[長崎県]のり面を工事中に男性落下、死亡


title: 長崎県でのり面工事中に男性が落下し死亡
date: 2025-10-16 06:00
categories: 社会
tags: 長崎県, 事故, のり面工事

長崎県長与町で、のり面を工事中に男性が落下し死亡する事故が発生しました。

詳細な情報は現在有料会員限定で公開されています。

【関連記事】
– 長崎・雲仙市の港で女性遺体が発見される

※この記事の全文は、有料会員のみがご利用いただけるサービスとなっております。

西日本新聞meとは?
クリップ機能は有料会員の方のみご利用可能です。

なお、7日間の無料トライアルを実施中で、1日あたり37円で読み放題となっております。年払いプランもご用意しておりますので、ぜひご検討ください。
https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1411828/

Consumer Connect: ‘Builder Cannot Forfeit More Than 2% On Flat Booking Cancellation,’ Says Expert

Can the Builder Forfeit 10% Booking Amount on Flat Cancellation? Understanding Your Rights Under RERA

Question: My friend booked a flat in Kandivali on March 15, 2025, by paying Rs 17 lakh, which is 10% of the total flat cost. The builder issued only an allotment letter mentioning the flat number, total area, cost, and possession date. In May, my friend received a transfer order and had to cancel the booking on May 28, 2025. He requested the builder to refund the amount paid, but the builder claimed that, as per the terms in the allotment letter, the entire 10% amount would be forfeited. Can the builder legally do this under RERA? What are the rights of homebuyers in such cases, and what is the maximum deduction allowed? – Rajendra Rane, Borivali (West)


Answer:

Under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 (RERA), homebuyers enjoy specific protections regarding the cancellation and refund of property bookings.

MahaRERA has issued a model allotment letter that all builders must use when accepting booking amounts, with the booking amount capped at 10% of the total flat cost.

Further, as per MahaRERA’s official orders dated August 12, 2022, and September 3, 2024, if a homebuyer cancels a booking, the builder can forfeit only a maximum of 2% of the total flat cost.

Refund Deduction Caps Under MahaRERA

  • Within 15 days of booking: Full refund with no deduction.
  • Between 16 and 30 days: Deduction up to 1% of the total flat cost.
  • Between 31 and 60 days: Deduction up to 1.5%.
  • Beyond 60 days: Deduction up to 2% only.

In your friend’s case, since the cancellation was made after 60 days, the builder can legally deduct only 2% of the flat’s cost and must refund the remaining amount.

Therefore, the clause in the allotment letter allowing forfeiture of the entire 10% booking amount is contrary to MahaRERA’s orders and is unenforceable.

Unfortunately, many builders still include such arbitrary forfeiture clauses in allotment letters, ignoring MahaRERA’s clear directives.

Relevant Case Law: Preeti Dwivedi vs. Raymond Realty

In this case, the complainant paid Rs 6.07 lakh as a booking amount for a Rs 1.16 crore flat. After cancelling the booking within three months, Raymond Realty insisted on forfeiting 10%, citing its allotment letter.

MahaRERA held the 10% forfeiture clause to be arbitrary and directed the builder to deduct only 2% and refund the balance to the homebuyer.

Additional MahaRERA Provisions

  • Builders must refund the balance amount within 45 days of cancellation.
  • If the builder fails to refund within this period, they are liable to pay penal interest at MCLR + 2% per annum on the refund amount.

These rules protect homebuyers from unfair forfeiture clauses and ensure fairness and accountability in property transactions.

Homebuyers often have genuine reasons to cancel bookings, but builders have long exploited such situations by imposing harsh forfeiture terms. MahaRERA’s regulations now safeguard consumer rights in these matters.


Advocate Shirish V Deshpande is chairman of Mumbai Grahak Panchayat. Queries can be sent to him at shirish50@yahoo.com.

For exclusive and budget-friendly property deals in Mumbai and surrounding regions, visit: https://budgetproperties.in/

https://www.freepressjournal.in/mumbai/consumer-connect-builder-cannot-forfeit-more-than-2-on-flat-booking-cancellation-says-expert

Consumer Connect: ‘Builder Cannot Forfeit More Than 2% On Flat Booking Cancellation,’ Says Expert

**Can the Builder Forfeit 10% Booking Amount on Flat Cancellation? What Are Homebuyers’ Rights Under RERA?**
*By Advocate Shirish V Deshpande, Chairman, Mumbai Grahak Panchayat*

**Question:**
My friend booked a flat in Kandivali on March 15, 2025, by paying Rs 17 lakh, which is 10% of the total flat cost. The builder issued only an allotment letter mentioning details such as the flat number, total area, cost, and possession date.

In May, my friend received a transfer order and had to cancel the booking on May 28, 2025. He requested the builder to refund the amount paid, but the builder claimed that, as per the terms in the allotment letter, the entire 10% amount would be forfeited.

Can the builder legally do this under RERA? What are the rights of homebuyers in such cases, and what is the maximum deduction allowed?
— Rajendra Rane, Borivali (West)

**Answer:**

Under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 (RERA), homebuyers enjoy clearly defined rights regarding the cancellation and refund of property bookings.

MahaRERA has issued a **model allotment letter** that every builder must use when accepting the booking amount, which cannot exceed 10% of the total flat cost.

**What does MahaRERA say about cancellation and refund?**
According to MahaRERA’s orders dated August 12, 2022, and September 3, 2024:

– If a homebuyer cancels a booking, the builder can **forfeit a maximum of 2% of the total flat cost**.
– Refund deductions are capped depending on the cancellation timeline:

– **Within 15 days of booking:** Full refund, no deduction.
– **Between 16 and 30 days:** Deduction up to 1% of total flat cost.
– **Between 31 and 60 days:** Deduction up to 1.5%.
– **Beyond 60 days:** Deduction up to 2% only.

In your friend’s case, since the cancellation was made **after 60 days**, the builder can deduct only **2% of the flat’s cost** and must refund the remaining amount.

The clause in the allotment letter allowing forfeiture of the entire 10% amount is contrary to MahaRERA’s orders and is therefore **unenforceable**.

### Important Precedent: Preeti Dwivedi v/s Raymond Realty
In a similar case, the complainant had paid Rs 6.07 lakh as booking amount for a Rs 1.16 crore flat. After cancelling within three months, Raymond Realty insisted on forfeiting 10%, citing the allotment letter.

MahaRERA held the clause arbitrary and directed the builder to deduct only 2% and refund the balance to the homebuyer.

### Additional Buyer Protection under MahaRERA

– Builders **must refund the balance amount within 45 days** of cancellation.
– Failure to refund on time makes the builder liable to pay **penal interest at MCLR + 2% per annum** on the refund amount.

### What This Means for Homebuyers

Homebuyers often have genuine reasons to cancel bookings. Unfortunately, some builders impose unfair forfeiture clauses to exploit these situations. MahaRERA’s rules now protect homebuyers from such unfair practices, ensuring greater fairness and accountability in property transactions.

If you face similar issues, it is advisable to:

– Check whether the booking amount exceeds 10% of the total cost (which it should not).
– Verify whether the refund deductions comply with MahaRERA guidelines.
– Approach MahaRERA for dispute resolution in case of non-compliance.

*For further legal queries, you can write to Advocate Shirish V Deshpande at shirish50@yahoo.com.*

**Looking for budget-friendly property deals in Mumbai and surrounding areas?**
Visit [https://budgetproperties.in/](https://budgetproperties.in/) for exclusive listings and offers.

*Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.*
https://www.freepressjournal.in/mumbai/consumer-connect-builder-cannot-forfeit-more-than-2-on-flat-booking-cancellation-says-expert

Major city centre road to close for a day

A section of a busy road in Douglas city centre will be closed for one day next month to allow building work on an office.

Athol Street will be shut between Prospect Hill and Church Street. The closure will begin at 6am and the road is expected to reopen at 6pm on Sunday, October 19.

Motorists are advised to plan alternative routes during this time.

https://www.three.fm/news/isle-of-man-news/major-city-centre-road-to-close-for-a-day/

Thane: 1 Injured As Truck Carrying Iron Materials For Metro Construction Overturns On Honda Car On Ghodbunder Road; Video Surfaces

**Accident on Ghodbunder Road: Truck Overturns onto Car, Driver Injured**

Thane: An accident occurred on Friday afternoon in Thane’s Ghodbunder Road area, involving a truck transporting iron materials for Metro Rail construction. The truck overturned onto a Honda Elevate car, causing significant damage.

The incident took place at Kajupada in the Ghodbunder Road area. Visuals circulating on the internet show the iron rods-laden truck tilted over the Honda car, with the driver’s side of the vehicle completely crushed under the truck’s weight.

The driver of the car was injured in the accident. However, details regarding the extent of the injuries sustained by the car driver are currently unknown. Similarly, there is no information available about the condition of the truck driver.

This is a developing story, and more information will be provided as it becomes available.
https://www.freepressjournal.in/mumbai/thane-1-injured-as-truck-carrying-iron-materials-for-metro-construction-overturns-on-honda-car-on-ghodbunder-road-video-surfaces