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16 Indian Cities Every Architecture Student Must Visit Before Graduating | Niharika

Sanyal
A travel bucket list for enthusiasts in design, culture and history.
ROOMS Research Collective - Architecture and NeurosciencePublished on 15 Jun, 2015

Verses are not, as people imagine, simply feelings... they are experiences. For the sake of a single verse, one must see
many cities, men and things.
Poet Rainer Maria Rilke neatly sums up the process behind any creative act dismissing the notion that ideas or work can stand alone - being as they
are transformations and combinations of experiences and insights that existed before them. Before putting pen to paper its important to inform oneself,
and what better way to start off than by unearthing the layers of rich insights stored in India.
So pack your bags and map out your journeys. Admittedly, this list just kept burgeoning once I got down to doing an informal survey; but five years of
studying is a long time, and a lot of these trips can be clubbed together! Remember the creative benefits of keeping a sketchbook at hand, mingle with
the locals, avoid large groups (like the plague, if you can!) and bear witness! Here's why these places are necessary visits for anyone enthusiastic
about design, culture and history:

1. Leh
Monastery in Leh, by Kinny Soni

Visit for the terrain and the Tibetan monasteries - epitomes of cold climate vernacular architecture. These are invaluable references to
understand site relationships and building systems.
On the way to and from Leh, stop at Shimla, Manali and Dalhousie to see the exemplary Himachal house types.
Village in Manali (Photos: Rochan Kalmani)

As one student astutely observes,

Indian cities no doubt have a zest of their own. But villages in India challenge their inherent nature a visit to them makes
you question nearly everything.
What happens to the crafts and craftspeople of these villages when they progress towards urbanism? How are the occupations of residents of a
village different from urban landscapes? Does it impact the architecture? Can materials impart aesthetics of their own? One begins to question
the very nature of what city life has to offer. Interestingly, the power to live with the change or reconfigure it remains with the
spectator.

The cue being that while you visit these cities, always keep an eye out for the by-lanes and diversions that lead to less
explored areas!

2. Chandigarh
Capitol Complex (Photos: Niharika Sanyal)

This is a must visit - "for being the only complete example of Nehruvian vision translated into city design. See how, ironically, the current
population adjusts to miscalculations made in a bygone era." Or as another student put it, visit it to learn the importance of not designing like
Corbusier! Love it or doubt it - decide for yourself!
And while all this Modernism overload is great, miss not late artist Nek Chand's phenomenal labour-of-love, the Rock Garden - a sensual labyrinth of
textures that serves as a striking commentary on the geometric grid that is Chandigarh.
Rock Garden (Sources: Earthdrifter, Niharika Sanyal)
Take a bus ride to Anandpur Sahib to visit the grandiose Sikh museum Virasat-e-Khalsa, designed by Moshe Safdie. (Source: virasatekhalsa.in)

3. Delhi
Humayun's Tomb and Jantar Mantar (Photos: Niharika Sanyal)

This is an obvious choice on the list, for being one of the oldest capitals in the world. Visit to see the layering - the ferment of time - and what it
does to place and culture. Witness the contrasts between historic, British, modern and post independence India - how traditional materials and

characteristics have been consciously adapted into designs.


Raj Rewal's National Institute of Immunology and State Trading Corporation; Joseph Allen Stein's India Habitat Centre and IIC. (Sources as linked, otherwise by Niharika
Sanyal)

A trip to Delhi would be incomplete without making a stop at Fatehpur Sikri a fascinating ancient city in red sandstone that continually offers up
lessons, the more one studies it. Like Alhambra, this is one of those plans that eternally inspires! Needless to say, the nearby Taj Mahal and Agra
Fort, as epitomes of Mughal architecture, add a neat conclusion to this trip.
Fatehpur Sikri, sketches by Pinkal Patel

4. Varanasi
Life and death on the ghats. (Photos: Niharika Sanyal)

Mark Twain had said,

Varanasi is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old as all of them put
together.
Visit Varanasi for the ghats and temples to witness the chaos of Indian street life, and the fervour of religious devotion that life on
the ghats revolves around. Make Diana Eck's wonderful book 'Banaras: City of Light' your companion, and search the place for mythic symbolisms
if you dare.
Conceptual drawing of a temple, by Pooja Shah

Combine this trip with a stop at Lucknow, a 6-hour bus ride away - to further understand how religion, politics, war and other decisive epochs
transform the built form of a city.

5. Kolkata
China Town: various ethnic influences on the post colonial architecture of Kolkata. (Elevations of Blackburn and Hupeh Association, by Gaurav Banerjee)

The city earns itself a place here for being one of the best examples of British colonial developments, as also for its complex urbanity blended with its
reigning nostalgia. At the urban level, its a unique example of co-existence - of history woven with time - of myriad cultures placed
beside one another.
A trip to Kolkata can be coupled with a Bhubaneshwar-Puri-Konark sojourn.
India Coffee House - the historic haunt of poets, artists and literati like Tagore and Subhash Chandra Bose; Howrah Bridge; Charles Correa's Salt Lake City Centre Mall
(Photos: Niharika Sanyal, Flickr user , Indian Travels)

6. Gangtok
Gangtok (Photo: Manthan Mevada who says, "One of the best things I like about the mountains is that it makes you realise your scale.")

Visit Gangtok for its streets as you get lost in them, they may wind up in someones house or open up to fantastic views of mountains!
Sometimes you may have to pass through someone's house, where the lady cooking or the uncle watching TV will all welcome you. The peculiarity
about Gangtok is the manner in which ornamentation lends a traditional appearance, even though the buildings may be of concrete. But if you want
to see traditional architecture then villages in Sikkim are the best places to be.
Rumtek Monastery; Bhutia dwellings (Niket Mistry, Manthan Mevada)

A trip to Gangtok may necessitate a leap to the north-east, where the riches of Meghalaya and Assam will leave you equally in awe. Be surprised by
some surreal European imagery in Darjeeling, and face the ultimate man-nature conundrum in the Living Root Bridges!
LEFT: Darjeeling (Sunny Agarwal), RIGHT: Living Root Bridge in Meghalaya (Manthan Mevada)

7. Jaipur
A street in Jaipur (Sagnik Das)

The fact that it is one of the earlier planned cities of India, designed on the basis of Vastu Shastra, makes Jaipur a must-visit. Experience it
for its co-existence with the old city.
Charles Correa's Jawahar Kala Kendra draws upon the mandala plan of Jaipur to achieve its diagram, and existing motifs from the old city are abstracted. (Drawings:

'Charles Correa', Kenneth Frampton; Photos: Niharika Sanyal)

8. Jodhpur
Jodhpur City (Photo: Shailja Patel, Sketch: Khyati Vindokumar)

Jodhpur wins its place for exemplifying the organic growth process of an old city. As one architect explains,
Its a robust city with a kind of roughness. One must visit it to understand the settlements relationship to topography and water, the variety of house
types that evolved due to land and social structure.

To observe the principles that generate the spaces of these kinds of cities (organic-accretive), Id say there isnt a better
laboratory than Jodhpur.
Jaisalmer is very intricate and picturesque, of course, but the pretty can sometimes distract from the structure so I would suggest architecture
students go where the structure is clearer first!
Ada Bazzar street elevations (Gaurav Banerjee)

Compliment this with Mehrangadh Forts imposing presence! While there, make a detour to Jaisalmer, an exemplary medieval fort-palace-city; or
Udaipur, to probe relationships with water.

9. Ahmedabad
ATMA by Corbusier (Photo: Niharika Sanyal), IIM-A by Louis Kahn (Mohit Sadani), Gufa by B V Doshi (Jon Ardern), Gandhi Ashram by Charles Correa (Addison Godel)

For being "the mecca of modern architecture in India" probably the only city in the world to have good examples of both Corbusier
and Louis Kahn in it (interestingly, Wright had also proposed a building here). Besides these, a plethora of contemporary buildings, particularly by
BV Doshi, and heritage structures like stepwells and mosques, necessitate a 4-5 day trip to this city.
Sarkhej, one of the finest, nuanced examples of the Indo-Sarcenic architecture. (Nishtha Banker)

A trip to Ahmedabad would be well complimented with a ride to the Kutch villages, Sidhpur, Patan or Champaner.
Stepwell at Patan, by Shailja Patel

10. Mumbai
View from the Fort of Worli. (Rakesh Semwal)

A city that provokes, Mumbai must be visited for the inherent contradictions it contains within its complex urbanity "traits and quirks
that make it one of the most bizarre places in the world!" Also visit it for the fantastic colonial and contemporary architectural works it contains;
and Marine Drive - 'Bombay's single most powerful urban image', as Charles Correa described it - that defines 'the edge between land and water in
one magnificent sweep'.
Victoria Terminus, Sumedha Sah: "The majestic VT station is a confluence of Gothic revival and Traditional Mughal Architecture."
Dadar Salvacao Church and Kanchenjunga Apartments by Charles Correa (Flickr users: Arnout Fonk and Yasir Azami)

11. Aurangabad
Ajanta caves, sketch by Nishtha Banker

While in Bombay, dont miss a trip to the caves Ajanta and Ellora to grasp the sheer incredulity of rock-cut architecture. The art
and ornamentation will take you back to a time when art was one with architecture. Also witness how Buddhist, Jain and Hindu art coexist and borrow
from each other. As one person put it,

Everything you need to know about Indian architecture, you can know by studying the plan of Kailash Temple!
Kailash Temple plan (Source: Wikimedia Commons), sketch by Nishtha Banker

12. Panjim
Drawing of Goa by Sumedha Sah: "The first one depicts the Konkan houses and the life that grows around it. City life in Panjim is
depicted in the second one. The sun-kissed beaches and tourists are the subject of the last spread."

"For the parallels this city offers to the mainstream culture represented by major cities above", it is well worth a visit, as also for the blend
of Portuguese colonial culture with that of the communities along the coastline of Goa. Churches, temples and ruins evoke monumentality, while the old
houses and urban spaces are worth studying in themselves.
While there, a trip to the ruins of Hampi and Badami is equally imperative!
Hampi (above) and Badami (below), by Bharat Patel

13. Bhopal
Indian Institute of Forest Management by Anant Raje, Manav Sangralay, Taj-Ul-Mosque, Bharat Bhavan by Charles Correa. (Photos: Dharal Surelia)

This fits into the list for being the finest lake city of central India (excluding those others besmirched by tourism, as an architect put it),
with impressive Islamic architecture and culture. It's also close-by from various other destinations. From here, one can easily make trips to
Mandu, for its stone marvels; and Khajuraho for its grand temple architecture.
Jahaz Mahal in Mandu, Khajuraho temple. (Sources: Jean-Pierre Dalbra, Harshil Parekh)

14. Auroville
Auroville's Galaxy master plan by French architect Roger Anger. (Source: auroville.org)

I'd say this is a definite destination for all youngsters, for its being a bold Utopic experiment in spiritual and sustainable living. Auroville is an
international community of around 2500 people near Pondicherry, offering several volunteering opportunities (the place is best understood from
within). Go there to observe the ongoing experiments in building materials and to experience an alternate lifestyle based on life-work
balance and community living.
Built experiments in Auroville (Photos: Niharika Sanyal)

A drive to Pondicherry, that charming French colonial city, is but 8 km away. Notice the grid iron city plan divided into two the French Quarter and
the Tamil Quarter. Observe the Franco-Tamil style architecture that resulted in some parts, with streets as community spaces. Visit the Golconde
Ashram, the first example of Modernism in India.

15. Trichy
Aerial view of Srirangam Temple. (Source: BizHut)

While in Tamil Nadu, dont miss a trip to the stunning Temple Towns of South India primarily Trichy, which has the exemplary Srirangam town a
bustling place with religion at its very diagrammatic centre. This is another plan that is an eternal reference point - for its religious
centre, concentric boundaries, scales of gateways, etc. Besides these temples, the city itself is a joy to observe. As one architect put it,
How many cities still have a garden in which they grow flowers to be placed in the temple. Jasmine no less, that you can smell as you walk down the
street to it!
On your way here, stop at Chidambaram and Tanjore equally striking works of architecture, scale and ornamentation.
A gopuram, Srirangam. (Niharika Sanyal)

16. Trivandrum
Laurie Baker's House, India Coffee House (Niharika Sanyal), Centre for Development Studies (Tanvi Jain)

Visit to see the traditional architecture prevalent in this equatorial climatic region; and the works of Laurie Baker, which create a true
benchmark in terms of cost-effective design. Head over also to Padmanabhapuram Palace to see the expression of this region at its glorious
peak!
Padmanabhapuram Palace, sketch by Ajay K Jacob

Disclaimer: Bucket lists are, by their nature, sensational and eye-grabbing and that is their purpose. You are advised to practise judgement and go
where personal research and interests take you!
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