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Record Rain, Ravaged Roads : Rainfall Reaches 130mm As Bengaluru Grinds To A Halt
In a city known for its gentle climate and vibrant tech landscape, Bengaluru faced an extraordinary test of resilience. Over just 12 hours, the skies unleashed more than 130mm of rain, transforming one of India's busiest metros into a scene of submerged streets, traffic gridlock, and heartbreaking loss. What unfolded between Sunday evening and early Monday was not merely a weather anomaly-it was a wake-up call.
A City Brought To A Standstill
As thunderstorms battered the city overnight, areas in the south, north and east of Bengaluru bore the brunt. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) recorded 105.5mm of rain within a 24-hour period ending at 8:30am on 19 May, with some pockets like Kengeri witnessing even higher totals. This volume of rain, rare for May, was enough to push over 20 lakes to the brink and overwhelm the city's stormwater systems.
Floodwaters inundated more than 500 homes, forcing residents to wade through knee-deep streets or climb onto terraces. Several flyovers and underpasses were rendered impassable, and public bus services were suspended in multiple zones. Key thoroughfares like Hosur Road-vital for daily commuters and the tech corridor were shut down, prompting some IT firms to switch to work-from-home arrangements, albeit informally.
Lives Lost Amid The Deluge
Tragedy struck in BTM Layout where 63-year-old Manmohan Kamath and 12-year-old Dinesh were electrocuted while trying to clear water using a pump. Dinesh had recently arrived in the city from Nepal with his family-his loss emblematic of how the city's most vulnerable often pay the highest price.
In another devastating incident, Sasikala D, a 32-year-old housekeeping worker, died after a compound wall collapsed in Whitefield. The Chief Minister has announced a compensation of ₹5 lakh to her bereaved family. Meanwhile, 50 kilometres away in Kengeri's Kote Layout, 100 homes were submerged, and five animals were reported dead in RR Nagar's Vrishabhavathi Valley due to rising floodwaters.
Infrastructure Under Pressure
Across the city, 44 cars and 93 two-wheelers were either submerged or swept away. The scale of the storm also uprooted 27 trees and brought down large branches in at least 43 other spots. Rescue teams from the State Disaster Response Force were deployed with boats to assist residents stranded in their homes.
Yet, despite the visual chaos, many technology firms had not issued formal work-from-home advisories. With rain still forecast for the coming days, adaptability remains key for both businesses and citizens.
Forecasts And Alerts
The IMD has placed Bengaluru under an orange alert, predicting continued heavy rain for the next five days. Yellow alerts have also been issued across Bagalkot, Belagavi, Dharwad, Gadag, and Koppal, while coastal and interior regions of Karnataka remain under red alert-signifying a much wider regional impact.
At the heart of this sudden surge in rain lies a convergence of two low-pressure systems, meteorologists report. It's a combination that could keep skies grey and tempers high for the week ahead.
Government's Response And Political Undercurrent
Maheshwar Rao, BBMP's chief commissioner, admitted candidly, "Sometimes, things get out of hand; we are working on it." He noted that this was the second-highest rainfall event Bengaluru has seen in a decade.
Meanwhile, Deputy Chief Minister D K Shivakumar claimed that flood mitigation measures had been implemented in 166 of the 210 flood-prone zones across the city. His assurance, however, has been met with scepticism from opposition leaders in the BJP, who argue that crores spent have yielded little visible improvement.
A Tipping Point For Urban Resilience
This episode underscores more than just a few blocked drains-it lays bare Bengaluru's ongoing struggle with urban planning, unregulated construction, and climate unpredictability. Once considered immune to such extremes, the city is a perfect example of how even India's tech capital is not insulated from the impacts of changing weather patterns and infrastructural neglect.
Final Thoughts : Beyond The Headlines
As the city dries its feet and counts its losses, Bengaluru must now reckon with the deeper questions this rainfall has unearthed. How prepared are our cities for tomorrow's climate? What lessons will be carried forward from this week's devastation?
For now, the city remains alert, its residents resilient, and its leaders one hopes more accountable. Because while storms may pass, the cracks they reveal often linger far longer.



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