How can asking who is responsible for roof cleaning tell you about building management habits?

Roofs collect dust, leaves, plastic, broken bits from repairs and sometimes even random junk people dump there. If nobody clearly “owns” the job of cleaning it—committee, caretaker, society contractor—it quickly becomes messy. Blocked drains, pooling water and ugly stains follow.

When you ask, “Terrace saaf kaun karwata hai, kitni baar?” you’re checking whether there’s a system or just vibes. A building where roof cleaning is on someone’s list is usually a building where other maintenance tasks are also tracked.

It’s not about perfection; it’s about whether basic responsibilities are acknowledged or ignored.

Related articles

The Little Things That Change When Your Water Gets Better

Most of us don’t spend much time thinking about...

A Well-Kept Home Feels Different Before You Even Walk Inside

Some houses have a kind of quiet confidence about...

The Little Plumbing Problems That Quietly Become Big Ones

There’s something oddly humbling about homeownership. One day you’re...

Built on Trust: How Local Water Experts Quietly Make Homes Better

There’s something reassuring about knowing who you’re dealing with....