Crores for a dream home, Fear at Every Step: In Noida’s High-Rises, Residents Now Look Up Before They Walk

A life lost to falling plaster, children wearing helmets to play and even a prayer meeting cancelled over safety fears, is this the future of high-rise living?

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For children, the open spaces inside a housing society should be a place of freedom and joy. Instead, many parents say they now keep a constant watch on the towers above.
For children, the open spaces inside a housing society should be a place of freedom and joy. Instead, many parents say they now keep a constant watch on the towers above.

For thousands of families living in Noida and Greater Noida’s high-rise societies, the fear is no longer outside the gates. It lives within the walls of the very homes they spent their life savings to buy. Every morning, residents step out of their towers and instinctively look up. Not to admire the skyline but to check whether a piece of plaster, concrete or debris might come crashing down from above. What was once sold as a dream of modern urban living is increasingly becoming a nightmare of uncertainty.

A prayer meeting that never happened

Nothing illustrates this fear better than what happened recently in Greater Noida’s Arihant Amber Society. After the tragic death of resident Vikas Chawla, who lost his life when a chunk of plaster fell from the building and caused a fatal accident, residents planned to gather for a prayer meeting in his memory. It was meant to be a moment of collective mourning, a chance for neighbours to come together and pay their respects.

But the gathering had to be cancelled. The reason was heartbreaking. Residents feared that more plaster could fall from the building during the prayer meeting. A society could not even safely hold a condolence gathering for a man who had died because of falling plaster. That reality has shaken residents far beyond Arihant Amber. For many, it was a moment that exposed just how deep the safety crisis has become.

When home becomes a hazard

In Noida’s Sector 78, residents of Antariksh Golf View-2 say falling plaster has become part of daily life.

Deepti, a resident of the society, says she constantly worries about her daughter whenever she steps outside.

“Pieces of plaster keep falling. It doesn’t matter whether it’s raining or there’s a storm. Many times, debris has fallen near my daughter. Once it damaged our car. I am scared to send her alone to the park now,” she says.

For children, the open spaces within a housing society should be places of freedom and joy. Instead, many parents say they now keep a constant watch on the towers above.

Some children have even started wearing helmets while cycling and playing outdoors. Not because of speeding vehicles or traffic accidents, but because residents fear falling debris from their own buildings.

A passion lost to fear

Young resident Lavivesh remembers spending evenings playing cricket with friends. Today, he rarely does. Near the Mother Dairy area of the society, debris has repeatedly fallen from upper floors, damaging vehicles and alarming residents.

“The condition of some balconies is frightening. They look as if they could collapse at any moment. I don’t spend much time outside anymore because there is always a fear that something may fall from above,” he says.

For many residents, the psychological impact is becoming as serious as the physical danger. The fear follows them every time they walk, park their cars or allow their children to play outdoors.

One death that raised many questions

The death of 46-year-old Vikas Chawla at Arihant Amber Society transformed long-standing concerns into a grim reality.

According to police, Chawla was riding his motorcycle out of the society when a large piece of plaster detached from the building exterior and struck him. He lost control of the bike, suffered a severe head injury and was later declared dead.

Police arrested the maintenance manager and registered an FIR. Yet for residents, the larger question remains unanswered.

Can accountability after a tragedy bring back a life that has already been lost?

A problem spreading across societies

The danger is not limited to one project.

From Supertech Eco Village-1 in Greater Noida West to multiple societies across Noida, incidents of falling plaster continue to surface. Cars have been damaged, residents have suffered close escapes and fears continue to grow with every storm and every passing season.

Residents say the warning signs have been visible for years. Cracks, exposed concrete, water seepage and deteriorating exteriors have repeatedly been reported, yet corrective action often arrives only after an incident occurs.

Paying more, receiving less

Adding to the frustration is the growing burden of maintenance charges. Residents say they pay thousands of rupees every month, expecting safe and well-maintained surroundings. Instead, many claim they are living amid crumbling structures and unresolved complaints.

In several societies across Noida and Greater Noida, residents have protested maintenance fee hikes while questioning where the money is being spent. Their argument is simple: if residents are paying more every year, why are buildings becoming less safe?

The audit reports that never came

Authorities have repeatedly ordered structural audits of ageing high-rise buildings. Yet many residents say little has changed on the ground. While policies have been announced and deadlines issued, families continue to walk beneath deteriorating facades every day. The gap between official orders and actual implementation has become painfully visible.

A city looking upward in fear

The tragedy of Vikas Chawla, the cancelled prayer meeting, the children wearing helmets and the parents afraid to let them play outside are all chapters of the same story.

This is not merely about falling plaster. It is about trust. Trust that a home should be the safest place in a person’s life. Trust that maintenance agencies will do their job. Trust that authorities will act before disaster strikes.

For thousands of residents across Noida and Greater Noida, that trust is beginning to crumble just like the concrete falling from the towers above them. And until meaningful action is taken, every walk beneath these buildings will carry the same silent question: Will everyone return home safely today?

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