Arts
History
Eashan Chaufla
A podcast about the making of the modernist city of Chandigarh - its origins, ethos, design principles, the people involved, its subsequent growth and possible futures.
Total 7 episodes
1
01/09/2024

4. The Capitol Complex

In the fourth episode, we discuss the implications of the UNESCO Heritage designation for the Capitol Complex on Chandigarh. We discuss Corbusier's process of siting the Capitol and its connection to cubism and the cosmos. We also talk about the intentionally open-ended quality of the Capitol Complex and how it relates to the future of citizenry and a faith in the nation's future.    TIMESTAMPS:   1:08 - The UNESCO Heritage Tag for the Capitol Complex and its consequences. Which parts of the city were included and why wasn’t the whole city included?   5:31 - Barbed wire, controlled access to the Capitol and guided tours   6:01 - Eurocentric exclusion of Jeanneret and other architects from UNESCO recognition   10:44 - The Capitol as Corbusier’s tour de force   14:39 - The siting of the buildings in the Capitol   17:00 - Corbusier and cubist architecture   21:37 - Corbusier’s fascination with India’s rural landscape and integration of the city and the village.   25:06 - Monumentality, temples and the cosmos in relation to the Capitol   30:48 - Buildings as celestial objects; the Capitol and its invocation of the sky   34:30 - The ‘East-West’ dichotomy and the change in perception of Chandigarh after the 70s and postmodernism   40:31 - Corruption, the Emergency and the attack on Nehruvian modernism   44:05 - The Open Hand, Nehru’s Non-Aligned Movement and the Third World.    46:52 - The open-ended, leaky Capitol Complex   49:28 - Citizenry, anticipatory democracy and nation building in the context of Chandigarh and India   52:49 - Aesthetic masterpieces of Le Corbusier OR crowning achievements of the aspirations of the Indian nation state and its faith in the future?
54m
01/09/2024

3. The Masterplan

In this episode, we will talk about the development of the Chandigarh masterplan. We will look at the design strategy behind the streets, the philosophy of the sector and the role of 'mistakes' in the masterplan. We'll also learn how Corbusier paid homage to the Mayer-Nowicki plan as well as the anthropomorphic nature of the Chandigarh plan. Finally, we'll briefly discuss the placement of the Capitol Complex and the Sukhna Lake.    TIMESTAMPS:   1:13 - What was the thinking behind the zig-zag arrangement of the sectors? Where is sector 13?   4:59 - The reason behind the curve in the Madhya Marg and other east-west marks   6:46 - ‘Mistakes’ in the masterplan; embracing the perfectly imperfect roughness of the concrete   8:57 - Reasons behind the hierarchy embedded in the plan and housing types   10:33 - Where is the ‘heart’ of the city? What makes sector-22 special?   13:08 - Corbusier’s proposal of mass housing blocks for Chandigarh; the extendability of the Secretariat   16:00 - The modularity of the masterplan set up for southward expansion   18:22 - Anthropomorphism in Chandigarh’s plan; the logic of the green belts as continuous playing fields   21:28 - The layout of the sector and homage to Mayer & Nowicki in the Corbusier plan in certain sectors   25:24 - Special sectors for museums (sector 10) and schools (sector 26)   27:54 - Was the golf course and Chandigarh club part of the original brief for the city?   30:56 - Corbusier complaining to Nehru and not being paid enough   33:35 - The internal facing sector houses, sheltered from traffic across the city   35:35 - The ‘displacement’ of villages to accommodate the masterplan; except for temples   37:22 - Chandigarh’s unique tree planting strategy and MS Randhawa’s role   41:21 - The siting of the Capitol Complex compared to the Mayer-Nowicki plan   44:24 - PL Verma, dams and a brief history of the lake  
48m
01/07/2024

2. Building Chandigarh: Assembling the Capital Project Team

In this episode we will talk about how the Chandigarh Capital Project team was selected. When did Corbusier and Jeanneret enter the picture and how was the rest of the team assembled? Who were the people displaced by Chandigarh and where did the labourers involved in the city's construction come from? We will also discuss the team's heirarchy and how the work was divided amongst them.   TIMESTAMPS:   1:07 - How and when did Le Corbusier become a part of the team?   3:23 - Was the idea of a competition ever floated to select the architects?   5:03 - How did Jane Drew and Maxwell Fry enter the project, following their African experience?   7:34 - Corbusier’s terms and conditions for joining the Chandigarh project   8:36 - The deal: Jeanneret to be in Chandigarh on behalf of Corbusier   12:24 - Corbusier’s preference to work from home   14:55 - CIAM’s role in globalising modernist architecture   17:46 - The false East-West dichotomy in Chandigarh’s discourse   19:51 - Criteria for selecting the younger architects   22:58 - Chandimandir rest house office as described by Mulk Raj Anand; how Corbusier ‘shrunk’ the Mayer plan.   27:30 - Land surveying and road laying by the engineers before shifting the office to Chandigarh   28:33 - The first building in Chandigarh - Capital Project Office in Nagla (Sector-19)   28:53 - The first houses came up in sector 22 to house the architects and engineers   30:28 - Labourers showed up in Chandigarh… from where? Were they trained on-site?   31:11 - The untold stories of the people and villages displaced to make way for Chandigarh   35:26 - The first ‘inhabitants’ of Chandigarh   36:17 - Corbusier fascinated by Indians carrying their beds on their heads!   37:00 - Jeanneret’s design for the Sector-19  Planners’ Office   38:46 - How the junior architects joined the team   39:44 - How was the work divided amongst the architects?   41:51 - The order of constructing the institutional buildings   42:57 - The conflict between white painted plaster and exposed bricks      
45m