Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
India

'Chandigarh Unbuilt': Creative Competition To Visualize Corbusier's Dream

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Aug, 2015 01:15 PM
    Chandigarh's founder architect Le Corbusier may have designed and established one of the country's few planned cities, but certain buildings that he wanted have not materialised even five decades after his death. A group of young architects has now conceptualised an international creative competition to seek 21st century designs for Corbusier's unfinished works.
     
    "Chandigarh Unbuilt" is the concept through which Archasm, an online international architectural competition organiser, wants designers to complete Corbusier's unfinished work at Chandigarh's "Capitol Complex", especially the 'Museum of Knowledge" and the 'Governor House' that the master-planner wanted to build.
     
    Anirudh Nanda, Harmeet Singh Bhalla and Nikhil Pratap Singh, all of whom graduated from the Chandigarh College of Architecture (CCA) earlier this year and constitute the Archasm team say they are getting a good response to the competition.
     
    "We wanted to provide a platform to architects and designers, including students, to design new things which are India-specific through this competition," Archasm member Nikhil Pratap Singh told IANS.
     
    The competition (last date Oct 31) is being organised when Chandigarh is observing the 50th anniversary of Le Corbusier's passing.
     
    "Behind the built and designed elements of Chandigarh also lie the unbuilt characteristics of the city, which exist only in the form of documents, interviews, pictures, models and archives. 
     
    The Meyer-Nowicki plan (earlier architects for Chandigarh before Corbusier) for the city or some of the buildings that remained confined in the thoughts of Corbusier and his team have been a subject of intrigue, awe, debate and negation to the city administrators since then. We tend to explore and unearth the various characteristics of unbuilt Chandigarh through this competition and try to contemplate the possibilities of turning all those visions into a reality for the city," the three young architects say on their website.
     
     
    "The competition involves putting modernistic principles in a contemporary era where the needs of the city have changed drastically and need to be addressed by a more creative approach rather than a conservative one. Even though the buildings were envisioned by Corbusier in the 1950s and 60s, we want to encourage 21st century designs to suit present conditions," Anirudh Nanda told IANS.
     
    "As students, we participated in a number of European architecture competitions. We found that not many such options of competitions were available in India. We decided to create that platform through Archasm. We will hold at least four competitions every year with prize money," Harmeet Singh Bhalla told IANS.
     
    Swiss-born French architect Le Corbusier, whose real name was Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris, led a team of European planners to design Chandigarh. The country's first prime minister Jawahar Lal Nehru wanted the city to be a symbol of post-independence, modern India.
     
    Corbusier planned the city on the lines of a human body - the Capitol Complex was to be the head, the commercial centre its heart, the industrial area its hand and the intellectual centre being the parkland. Each sector in the city was planned to be self-sufficient with markets, institutions and other services.
     
     
    The Capitol Complex was conceived by Corbusier himself. The main buildings, the Secretariat Complex, the Legislative Assembly complex and the High Court Complex, were completed during his time. The 'Open Hand' monument, the symbol of Chandigarh, is also in this complex.
     
    The unbuilt buildings from Corbusier's drawing table included the Governor House, Museum of Knowledge, an 11-storey building in Sector 17 and a football stadium near Sector 26, among others.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    South Asian nations have big hopes from Modi

    South Asian nations have big hopes from Modi
    Member nations of the South Asian regional grouping Saarc lay big hopes in the new Indian government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi with their respective media Wednesday reflecting the region's collective optimism over India's new leadership.

    South Asian nations have big hopes from Modi

    Congress, BJP in war of words over Smriti Irani's qualification

    Congress, BJP in war of words over Smriti Irani's qualification
    The row over allotment of the human resource development ministry to "non-graduate" Smriti Irani continued Wednesday with the Congress alleging she had misrepresented facts in her election affidavits and the BJP defending the actor-turned-politician

    Congress, BJP in war of words over Smriti Irani's qualification

    Kashmir: Process of abrogating Article 370 has begun, Omar fumes, RSS hits out

    Kashmir: Process of abrogating Article 370 has begun, Omar fumes, RSS hits out
    The row over article 370 escalated Wednesday with Jammu and Kashmir's political parties as well as Congress opposing any move to revoke the constitutional provision guaranteeing special status to the state and the RSS stressing that the state would remain an integral part of India and attacking Chief Minister Omar Abdullah for suggesting otherwise.

    Kashmir: Process of abrogating Article 370 has begun, Omar fumes, RSS hits out

    Meet Punjab's ministerial family - the Badals!

    Meet Punjab's ministerial family - the Badals!
    The Badal family now has a chief minister, a deputy chief minister, a union cabinet minister and two state cabinet ministers.

    Meet Punjab's ministerial family - the Badals!

    Now, drugs take a toll on Akali Dal

    Now, drugs take a toll on Akali Dal
    It is Punjab's best kept secret and yet is talked about in virtually every household in the state. The rampant drugs racket and substance abuse in the state have now come to haunt its political elite, the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal.

    Now, drugs take a toll on Akali Dal

    Modi, Sharif discuss terrorism; hope for new page in ties

    Modi, Sharif discuss terrorism; hope for new page in ties
    A day after taking oath of office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday held wide-ranging discussions here with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif on a range of issues including terrorism with a hope to start a new chapter in their strained bilateral ties.

    Modi, Sharif discuss terrorism; hope for new page in ties