ARCH-3521 - India (Part 1)
ARCH-3521 - India (Part 1)
ARCH-3521 - India (Part 1)
INDIA
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
OF ARCHITECTURE
INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION (2700
BC-1700BC)
The Indus Valley is one of the world's
earliest urban civilizations Flourishing
around the Indus River basin, the
civilization primarily centred along the
Indus and the Punjab region. The Indus
Valley Civilization located in the
northwestern region of the Indian
A well and drainage system at Lothal
subcontinent, consisting of what is now
mainly modern-day Pakistan and
northwest India.
Se cathedral goa
POST - INDEPENDENCE ARCHITECTURE AFTER 1947
WORKS OF MASTER
ARCHITECTS IN INDIA
• The group of buildings that form the government's administration complex – known
as the Capitol Complex – that have become symbolic of Le Corbusier’s work in India.
The Capitol Complex is made up of three concrete buildings: the Palace of
Assembly or Legislative Assembly, the Secretariat and the High Court. The Capitol
Complex is one of 17 Le Corbusier buildings is being recognized as a World Heritage
site by UNESCO.
• Le Corbusier saw the city like a human body. Based on 4 main functions (live, work,
move and keep body and spirit), the proposal makes an analogy with the human
body: the head is the Capitol Complex (Sector 1); the heart- the Central Area
(Sector 17); the lungs were Placer Valley, parks and green areas; the brain,
universities and schools, the circulatory system were 7Vs tract (The sectors are
linked by a network of streets called the 7Vs) and the digestive system the industry.
Capitol Complex
1. High Court
• The High Court was the first
building to be completed.
• It consists of an L-shaped block,
framed by a concrete cover that
functions as a large umbrella that
unfolds gracefully shaped arches,
and that somehow provides a
tribute to the decks of havelis in
Mughal architecture. The space
between the double roof
ventilation offers an ease in the
summer and protection during the
rainy season.
• Le Corbusier used to say that the
sun and rain are elements of
architecture, and therefore applied
in this building famous for its brise-
soleil, or the inclusion of items such
as umbrellas and permanent
constituent of the building.
2. Palace of Assembly
• The Palace of Assembly was designed to have an open-plan interior,
framed by a grid of reinforced concrete columns, offering a view of the
nearby Himalayan mountains.
• The building has a free facade – a feature that became integral to many of
Le Corbusier's designs – meaning it does not serve a structural purpose.
This allows it to host large sections of glazing covered in brise-soleils or sun-
breaks.
3. Secretariat Building
• The Secretariat is the largest of the structures, and houses the
headquarters of both the Punjab and Haryana governments.
• The massive building is almost 250 metres long and comprises eight
storeys of rough-cast concrete.
• Demonstrates similarities to Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation housing in
Marseille – arguably the most influential Brutalist building of all time.
• The concrete was molded into different forms to create complex
geometry and patterns, which are highlighted in the paintwork.
• Ramps at either end allow for vertical circulation through every storey.
Unité d'Habitation
housing in Marseille
Other Buildings designed by Le Corbusier in Chandigarh
Comparisons can be made between Le Corbusier’s Maison Citrohan and Villa Shodhan
particularly focusing on the male nature of this architecture. The angular, strong,
geometric form of Maison Citrohan clearly reflects the masculine aspects present in
architecture, and confers this onto the Villa Shodhan. The interconnected nature of the
ventilation and shade systems also highlights the similarities.
INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT (IIM)
Architect: Louis Kahn
Location: at an isolated rural area many miles away from the first point
urbanized city of Ahmedabad, one of the most populous in India, Gujarat state
Construction period: 1962-74
In 1961, a visionary group of industrialists collaborated with the Harvard
Business School to create a new school focused on the advancement of
specific professions to advance India’s industry. Their main focus was to
create a new school of thought that incorporated a more western-style of
teaching that allowed students to participate in class discussions and
debates in comparison to the traditional style where students sat in lecture
throughout the day.
Balkrishna Doshi, primarily assigned for the work, believed Louis Kahn would
be able to envision a new, modern school for India’s best and
brightest. Kahn’s inquisitive and even critical view at the methods of the
educational system influenced his design to no longer singularly focus on the
classroom as the center of academic thought. The classroom was just the
formal setting for the beginning of learning, the hallways and Kahn’s Plaza
became new centers for learning. The conceptual rethinking of the
educational practice transformed a school into an institute, where education
was a collaborative, cross-disciplinary effort occurring in and out of the
classroom.
CONSEPT
Kahn conceived the Indian Institute of Management as a mixture of austerity
and majesty, including spaces for informal interaction and achieving a balance
between modernism and tradition, which captured the timeless spirit of India.
local materials (brick and concrete) and large geometrical façade
extractions as homage to Indian vernacular architecture. It was Kahn’s
method of blending modern architecture and Indian tradition into an
architecture that could only be applied for the Indian Institute of
Management.
The large façade omissions are abstracted patterns found within the
Indian culture that were positioned to act as light wells and a natural
cooling system protecting the interior from India’s harsh desert
climate. Even though the porous, geometric façade acts as filters for
sunlight and ventilation, the porosity allowed for the creation of new
spaces of gathering for the students and faculty to come together.