The four-storey addition to the New Ahobilam Temple of Protection in Verulam collapsed on Friday, leaving five people dead and several others injured.
Image: Leon Lestrade/ Independent Media
THE eThekwini Municipality had declined to grant approval for construction near the New Ahobilam Temple of Protection in Redcliffe, Verulam, Durban because the land was zoned as a conservation reserve.
eThekwini Municipality Mayor Cyril Xaba said that between 2022 and 2023, the City received two building plans from the land trustees.
The temple is situated on the River Range Ranch in Redcliffe. It is believed the property, which is home to the Vrindavan Eco Village, is owned by the Vick and Helena Panday Family Trust. Vick Panday was one of the five people killed when the building collapsed on Friday.
“Both applications were refused because the land on which construction was proposed was zoned as a conservation reserve,” Xaba said.
“I also want to confirm that the four-storey building was erected without the necessary approvals from eThekwini Municipality, and unauthorised work was not observed during the course of construction and therefore no inspections were carried out.”
Xaba said that ordinarily, they pick up unauthorised building works, issue a contravention notice, and then the remedial order, because they could not pick it up earlier.
Xaba also noted the findings contained in the report and pledged to implement it to the letter of all recommendations.
Tragedy in Verulam: Five people died after the New Ahobilam Temple of Protection in Verulam collapsed.
Image: COGTA Media
“Such incidents have no place in our city. It must never be allowed to happen again. As a leadership, we will support all efforts aimed at ensuring that those responsible are brought to book,” Xaba said.
“This will send a strong message to would-be culprits that any similar transgressions will be made with the full might of the law.”
eThekwini municipal manager Musa Mbele said that there were about six buildings on the site, which were approved by the City.
“The occupancy certificates were also issued for those buildings to be used in accordance with the approved building plans. That really reflects a duty of care on the City’s side,” Mbele said.
“We were very surprised this time around, why they went on to build a building under the cover of secrecy and do it within a period of about four to six months, and evade our capability to inspect, given the fact that the site is located within a conservation area, and it is zoned rural residential.”
Mbele said they believed that once compliance was achieved in one building, the building of further sections continued without the requisite compliance.
"They were already encroaching into what we call the Durban Metropolitan Open Space System which is the conservation area that no one is permitted to build in except under very strict approval processes,” Mbele said.
KwaZulu-Natal Public Works and Infrastructure MEC Martin Meyer said the scene was handed over to the Department of Employment and Labour (DEL) since recoveries have been done. The DEL issued a prohibition notice on December 12, 2025, instructing the property owner not to remove, alter, or collapse the structure.
Cape Times