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Mexico City to Spend 18 Million Pesos to Rehabilitate Taxqueña Blast-Damaged Building Starting in March

The plan pairs structural repairs with a prevention push that begins with 10,000 free gas and carbon‑monoxide detectors for housing complexes.

Overview

  • Works will begin in March after completion of technical and executive plans and are slated to take six to eight months, with authorities confirming rehabilitation is feasible.
  • The city will cover the full structural rehabilitation cost of 18 million pesos, while residents replace personal furnishings and household items.
  • Twenty-four families and the building concierge are staying in hotel lodging paid by the Housing Secretariat and will receive rental support during the repair period.
  • The new program distributes 10,000 detectors that monitor for flammable gases, carbon monoxide, and low oxygen, with guidance to install them in halls and outside kitchens and to ventilate, evacuate, and call 911 if alarms sound.
  • Officials cite roughly 4,000 gas-related incidents a year across the capital and note that about 2,500 people were evacuated after the January 9 explosion, with emergency shoring already installed at the site.