New Delhi, June 4 -- The fire that killed at least 21 people at a Hauz Rani bed-and-breakfast on Wednesday has exposed a web of violations that investigators, officials and locals said appeared to have effectively transformed the building into a death trap. What was licensed as a six-room bed-and-breakfast (B&B) was, in reality, operating as a 26-room hotel. What had permission to run a tea-and-snack outlet, was functioning as a full-fledged restaurant. The structure never received a sanctioned building plan from the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) and lacked a mandatory fire safety no-objection certificate (NOC), officials said. Together, these violations created conditions that turned a fire into one of Delhi's deadliest fire disasters in recent years. Authorities said Flourish Stay was registered under the Delhi government's B&B scheme in 2024, with a licence valid until 2027. The scheme is intended to allow homeowners to rent out spare rooms while retaining the residential character of the property. Under its rules, operators can run a maximum of six guest rooms and are mandatorily required to reside on the premises - neither of which was followed. According to the licence issued by the tourism department, the property was permitted to operate only six rooms - three on the first floor and three on the second. But investigators found that the building had at least 26 rooms spread across a basement, upper floors and the rooftop. Online booking platforms advertised more than two dozen rooms across multiple categories of accommodation with tariffs ranging from Rs.2,000 to Rs.3,600 a night. An MCD official, requesting anonymity, said the building had never been booked for any violations by the civic body. The official said it's building plan was never sanctioned. Then there's the matter of the restaurant/cafe - Snacks and Bites - operating from the building's ground floor. Under the B&B scheme, establishments are not permitted to operate commercial kitchens or restaurants. A second MCD official, also seeking anonymity, said the establishment had earlier obtained permission for a tea-and-snack outlet, but that licence expired in April. But again, the so-called "snacks" outlet was a full-fledged restaurant. The building's character, locals and officials said, was not of a residential nature by any means. The building's facade had been enclosed with toughened glass and much of the structure had been sealed off to maximise commercial space, eating into ventilation. Fire officials believe those alterations played a crucial role in the scale of the disaster. AK Malik, chief fire officer of the Delhi Fire Service's south zone said: "The entire building is like a shaft. It is sealed from all four sides. Even in the front there is a facade, and the windows are sealed. In buildings like these, it often happens that the fire spreads rapidly." When the blaze broke out, smoke travelled quickly through the structure, trapping guests on upper floors and leaving them with no safe escape route....