Academic activity at a prominent south Mumbai college has temporarily shifted online after a civic demolition drive disrupted access and movement within its campus, highlighting the fragile intersection between urban regulation enforcement and essential public institutions. The decision follows action by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation against an allegedly unauthorised structure within the college premises in the Churchgate area.
The demolition, carried out over the weekend by a ward-level civic team, targeted portions of a structure flagged for regulatory non-compliance. While no teaching spaces were structurally damaged, the scale and intensity of the operation created significant noise and safety-related disruption, prompting the institution to suspend in-person lectures temporarily. Officials overseeing the campus said online classes were introduced to ensure academic continuity while internal circulation areas, including staircases, are cleared and secured. The affected institution, HR College of Commerce and Economics, is among Mumbai’s older educational establishments, operating from a building that has existed for several decades. According to college authorities, recent repair and refurbishment work had been completed prior to the civic action, and proposals related to regularisation of certain structural elements had been submitted through official channels.
Education administrators said examinations with statutory timelines, including board-level assessments, would proceed as scheduled, while internal evaluations for junior college students have been deferred. Answer script collection during the demolition day was completed without delay, indicating efforts to minimise academic loss despite operational challenges. Urban governance experts note that the episode underscores a broader issue facing dense, heritage-rich precincts such as Churchgate, where institutional buildings often undergo incremental modifications over decades. Regulatory frameworks, they argue, must balance enforcement with contextual sensitivity, especially when actions affect access to education and other essential services.
From a planning perspective, the incident also raises questions about coordination between civic authorities and social infrastructure providers. While enforcement of building norms is critical for public safety and climate resilience, abrupt disruption can disproportionately impact students, faculty, and staff who rely on predictable access and mobility. Urban planners suggest that clearer timelines, pre-demolition communication, and phased corrective measures could reduce disruption without diluting regulatory intent. Civic officials, meanwhile, maintain that demolition drives are carried out following due process and are necessary to address safety risks associated with unauthorised construction. Ensuring compliance, they argue, is particularly important in older buildings where structural changes may not align with contemporary safety and disaster management standards.
As cleanup and safety works continue on the campus, the college is expected to review its academic schedule on a day-to-day basis. The episode serves as a reminder that Mumbai’s push for orderly, resilient urban development must be accompanied by mechanisms that safeguard continuity in education and other people-centric services, especially in high-density urban cores where enforcement actions have wide ripple effects.
HR College Moves Classes Online After BMC Drive