In Cyprus, things weather.
Walls crack. Paint peels. Balconies rust. Concrete fades under years of sun, salt, wind and rain. And slowly, almost imperceptibly, what once felt solid begins to soften at the edges.
Most of the time, we don’t notice. And then we do…
This month, in Yermasoyia, part of a block of flats collapsed – suddenly, and catastrophically. Two people lost their lives. Others were injured.
The building, it later emerged, had already been deemed unsuitable for habitation. Letters had been sent. Warnings given. And yet, people were still living there.
In January 2025, a balcony (again, in Yermasoyia; is it the soil?!) caved onto the one below.
But the scale of the problem goes far beyond individual cases: local authorities warning that ageing apartment blocks have been “plaguing us for years”. Back in January 2024, it emerged that around 400 buildings in Limassol had already received warning letters requiring repairs, while 130 had been declared dangerous, following yet another balcony collapse which damaged vehicles below.
By December 2024, officials were warning that the situation was worsening, with the municipality noting that “the problems are escalating” and that a majority of property owners had still not responded to repair notices. Meanwhile, Cyprus has been described as having some of the highest rates in the EU for damp, rot and structural deterioration in homes.
Clearly, this is a pattern that stretches back years. And it’s not just about one building – or one town. It’s about an island-wide deterioration that is, unfortunately, happening slowly, but surely. In plain sight.
This is a nation shaped by history and heat. By seawater and salt; winter rains that seep and drip into cracks and crevices.
We know this. We live with it. We have to.
Because all too often there simply isn’t the time or money for the full repairs. So, we patch. We postpone. And we carry on – looking, askance, at the crack in the bedroom wall and wondering if we’ll plunge to our deaths overnight.
Most of us are safe. Most of the time.
But occasionally, we’re not. And two people killed in a building collapse is two people too many.
Factor in our seismic instability, and Cyprus is very much at the mercy of both geography and elements. Perhaps we should all be paying a bit more attention to weathering – and the weather?
After a brief build in cloud on Friday, the capital settles into a familiar spring rhythm: warm, bright and just slightly unsettled at the edges. Nicosia holds steady in the mid-20s across the weekend, with sunshine returning on Saturday and the outside chance of a passing shower on Sunday.
Along the south coast, Limassol follows a similar pattern, though a touch cooler. Friday’s cloud gives way to clearer skies by Saturday, and by Sunday things feel properly settled: sunny, pleasant and edging towards that early-summer warmth. Larnaca and Ayia Napa see a little more movement in the air, with breezier afternoons, but the story is much the same – cloud thinning, sun strengthening and temperatures climbing comfortably into the mid-20s.
Further west, Paphos begins the weekend under increasing cloud before brightening steadily. By Sunday and into Monday, it’s all about sunshine and clarity, with that softer coastal warmth that never quite tips into heat.
Up in Troodos, however, the contrast remains. While Friday and Saturday improve gradually, Sunday brings a return of showers and a noticeably cooler feel. It’s a reminder that altitude still has the final say here. As does the weather – especially when it comes to our homes!
Anecdotally speaking, Cyprus may not always feel like the most carefully maintained place in the world. But on an island that has weathered so much, so many times, one thing is clear: we would never have endured if everything around us – buildings, systems, structures – simply failed.
Through heat and storms, tremours and time, most things here still stand. And perhaps that’s the real takeaway.
Not that nothing breaks. But that, somehow, most of it holds.
Weekend weather tips
• Expect a breezy feel along the coast – lighter layers may not be enough at times
• Mornings start fresh, but it warms quickly – plan around the midday heat
• Strong sunshine by midday – shade will matter if you’re out for long periods
• Troodos is your cooler escape – noticeably fresher than the coast
• Best outdoor windows: late morning and early evening

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