Picking up the pieces after Michaung, a case from a gated community in Pallikaranai
The Hindu
How a gated community in Pallikaranai that was badly affected in Cyclone Michaung are picking up the pieces
It is more than 10 days since Cyclone Michaung struck, and residents of Purva Windermere in Pallikaranai are picking up the pieces and assessing the financial impact of the disaster.
The gated community, which is spread across 55 acres and has more than 2,000 flats, was among the worst-affected in these parts. One of the most gripping and poignant images of the calamity — cars being washed away in the floodwaters — came from this landscape.
Residents who spoke to The Hindu Downtown say that a number of families that had left the community in the wake of Michaung have returned. The residents’ association has hit the ground running communicating information to residents. Last week, a few insurance companies and vehicle dealers set up a camp at the community for the benefit of residents. The number of vehicles that suffered damage is so high that every day there are vehicles being towed away, from the society, say residents.
Members are yet to access the financial damage caused by the catastrophic event, but expect some of the utility items to be covered by insurance.
“Our immediate priority is to restore the water and sewage treatment plant,” says Harihara Subramanian, president of Purva Windermere Owners Association. Work on cleaning the place is under way.
“There is no proper infrastructure for the water coming from the canals to flow down to the other lakes, which is why the water gushed into our compound breaking the wall,” says Subramanian.
He says water at some blocks had reached a height of four feet. “The lifts were submerged for four days,” he says.