Thursday, March 29, 2018

CITY RENEWAL & URBAN RESTRUCTURING



The post-1990s experience in Mumbai represents urban renewal processes as in other cities of Asia. As a city that is topographically challenged with land constraints and ageing infrastructure housing redevelopment is a response towards decongestion of the inner city and densification of the suburbs. This, in turn, is linked to neo-liberal urbanism characterized by economic restructuring and greater global linkages. Under the aegis of neo-liberalism, redevelopment has accelerated signifying a bigger and bolder approach to address the long-standing problem of slums in the city. 

It points to changing governance, urban restructuring whereby Mumbai has graduated from the state-led develop mentalist industrialization (that prioritized urban infrastructure to support mass production and economic growth) of the 1960s and 1970s to the neo-liberal and market-friendly processes of the 1990s. However redevelopment, a vital part of this growth story, has resisted wholesale replacement of developmental urbanism by neo-liberal urbanism by retaining the institutional and material legacies of developmental urbanism through a tailored approach to redevelopment in different parts of the city. 

The redevelopment narrative in Mumbai has resulted in sub economic centers or integrated development with their own characteristic living and working typologies. Examples include Andheri, Goregaon, Malad, Vikhroli, Sewri and Chembur infused with their own characteristic social homogeneity that has subverted the pre-existing territorialised social and economic structure.  Mumbai is a polycentric city, with the landscape and activities increasingly fashioned around this concept. Redevelopment has also identified pockets of land that hitherto were disconnected from the economic and development processes of the city. These pockets are important land parcels in terms of location, connectivity and development potential. Redevelopment has allowed such deprived pockets to be integrated with the development process of the city.

Note: Abstract of original article written by Dr. Binti Singh & Manoj Parmar, featured in Domus India, April 2018 edition.

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

UDVADA: COMMUNITY | WORSHIP

Lots have been written on Udvada town, its importance as Parsi community town, its history and most importantly the worship place. However the recent attempt to create heritage awareness of the town has resulted positive responses from community and historians. The town is an agglomeration of various architectural typologies (by functions), creating unique experience and bringing sense of place and community living. It is necessary to not only document the place but also disseminate the important lesson on "what is sense of place and heritage". 











































Wednesday, December 27, 2017

ZAHA HADID: INNOVATION TOWER, HONG KONG

The recently opened Innovation tower building in Hon kong Polytechnic University is fine example of contemporary building practice by Zaha Hadid. The building has spectacular presence in central open space where existing buildings have their dated presence of modernist era. The  eccentric cascade of fluid form draws the attention among the brick 
cladded disciplined modern building. The innovation center is dynamic within where common areas like podium, stairs resonate the formal property of exterior cascading form. 

The stacked, layered and sliding away design reflects the long obsession of dynamic nature of the city of Hon kong. The form is dissolving the high rise typology into knitted fluid form. It offers striking visual experience as building unfolds itself with multi-layered spaces and vistas of city outside.



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Ethical and Moral Construct of Modern