Wednesday, January 30, 2019
MAINTENANCE - (THE LOSS OF ) THE IDEA OF RENEWAL
Rusted Side Panels and Door of Electrical Switch Box in DDA Park Mehrauli |
You see it on the Pavement. You see it on the Delhi Metro Stations, on the walls and floors of your housing complex, in the classrooms of the schools you attend or teach in. You see it on the road, in the public toilets, in the local markets.
There is a good chance you see it at home too.
The faulty drawer in the kitchen that wont shut, or the bent window frame that lets in a small cust of cold winter air every-now-and-again.
Or the flaking and slowly disappearing plaster and paint of the new IIT hostels on the ring road!
You see it everywhere!
More correctly, we see the absence of it.
One would imagine, that buildings, and public facilities are designed to be permanent, and lifelong. Of course that is a fallacy.
Materials have life cycles, and like everything else, mam-made or otherwise, experience wear and tear, from use and weather, they undergo stresses and strains, sometimes even damage.
To design a building, without expecting as much is foolhardy, and to commission projects and not expect to have to maintain them- or to put it more directly - to expect not to have incur expences on account of periodic maintenance is a rather self defeating idea as well as guarantee for raking up large expenses on account of repair, and replacement that might far outweigh the costs of periodic upkeep, not to mention the ease and comfort of having a working, long term system in place and functional at all times.
One might argue that the private individual, who sometimes very unwisely sink all their available resources and more into affording housing/ or cars or whatever else they fancy, might be strapped for funds when maintenance is concerned.
But I fail to see how public projects, and infrastructure could be effected by this?
Or is maintenance just some thing we never plan for! If that is the case it is a huge issue? Do planners and designers actually think about this? Wear and Tear, that maintenance is a real concern and a means to achieve both frugality and economy, and a great degree of environmental and material responsibility.
Is it policy failure? or is it apathy? or are funds being siphoned off? One does wonder?
Its almost everywhere and No one seems to mind!
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Transport Killed Urbanism (Pretty much!)
The Rapid Metro - Golf Course Road |
The idea that the means for getting people, or should we say
workforces, from places of their unusefulness ( read, rest, family life,
personal engagement and development) to places of employment has been for over
half a century the primary preoccupation of city planning and infrastructure
design.
In our own backyard we see the first signs of it in
Chandigarh – lines drawn across a dusty plane as fastest and straightest
connection between two points for transport of people using autonomous motor-vehicles – what we call cars
today! For ease of navigation and efficiency, the lines are straight, and a
right-angle grid spreads across a predetermined area, establishing its primary
structure. Everything else, though beautifully extolled and celebrated in post event rationalisations, could
as easily be argued as simply an unavoidable aftermath.
The motorized private transport has been the engine of modern urbanism,
providing access, and freedom, and of course aspiration. The image of the big,
modern city was never without cars, flyovers, and even personal flying
transport. But in a century of this kind of transport being around it has not really made the city any better.
And mass, rapid transport, has only added to that woe.
The issue, one begins to see, is not in the nature of the
vehicle, but in the myopia and shortsightedness of the visions that have been
driving their inclusion in urbanism. And of course the fact that the city, once
again has turned into an engine of
economy and not a place of Culture, Art and Life as it was hoped and theorised.
You only have to drive/ walk around Delhi and Gurgaon, and
the manner in which Transport oriented infrastructure has mauled and fractured
the urban experience cannot be hidden by any amount of beautification or
insertion of novelty. The absence of Pedestrian facilities at the massive
flyovers at AIIMS intersection, or the
completely callous placing of Metro
Pillars, squarely on pavements ( that are meant to be used by the very same
people, the metro is provided for), or the huge messes of over-and underpasses
for motor-vehicles that are designed without a thought that citizens walk too. That the experience of walking should not have to be one of traversing an obstacle
course laced with death-traps, seems to be the least of the concerns of the
designers and policy makers that pen these decision from their Out-look Towers,
and air-conditioned chauffeured sedans.
At this point is might be also pertinent to remind ourselves of that ridiculous idea of Transport Oriented Development, TOD for short, that has been, ( or was) touted as the future of Delhi by the very capable DDA. That discussion we shall save for another day.
At this point is might be also pertinent to remind ourselves of that ridiculous idea of Transport Oriented Development, TOD for short, that has been, ( or was) touted as the future of Delhi by the very capable DDA. That discussion we shall save for another day.
Nelson Mandela Marg - New Delhi |
Much of the notion of the city relies on the car as aspiration,
and that you haven’t arrived, or made it until, you can afford one.
I remember tweeting, once – The affordable (cheap) motorcar
has been used to sell us (really) bad urbanism. I wonder if you would agree?
Every other day the city sprouts another marvel( or monster)
of public work, destroying whatever is left of the Urban Public space, and it
doesn’t help that there is this perception that the public space of the city is
unsafe.
It was not always unsafe, that’s what the urban-designers,
city-planners and policy makers have made it. Bit-by-bit, cutting it up,
destroying any kind of legibility, de-humanising its scale, and completely
neglecting the needs of citizens that live outside of gated safe-houses and
controlled private enclaves.
It makes more sense to do this for two primary reasons – you
can control people better, and the way more important one – privately help
public space requires you to spend money, both to access it and once within to
receive service. Neither of these were possible in the democratic space of the
city.
Pedestrian Overbridge - Aruna Nagar, Majnu Ka Tila |
Present day urbanism thrives on the aspiration of Privately held Space (that is carefully kept in short supply), controlled and limited access – a visit to Gurgaon especially along the
high value Golf-course road would make this quite apparent. You can see the
same in varying degrees all across the NCR.
The Notion that better transport infrastructure will make a
better city, or give you a better Quality of life, of even raise your standard
of living, seems to be falling apart quite rapidly!
But you would see that if you walked on the streets, and if you had
your feet on the ground! And if you were not looking at the world from the back
seat of your luxury car with rose tinted glasses!
A Raod-side Baber's stall - Gurgaon |
Post Script - The city
as I see it now is a little zoo designed to keep you working, so you can make
the money to buy the things that you never needed, that large corporations want
to sell you after which, so you can get drunk on overpriced alcohol in safe
havens on a weekend before you can go back to work on Monday! Its so much
easier than making a city where you could go for walks, talk on the streets and
meet people, and generally enjoy a beautiful urban experience. But then that
wouldn’t make anyone any money!
Labels: architecture, cars and the city, city, city in decline, decline, gurugram, indian urbanism, infrastructure, public space, transport, unsafe, urban development, Urban Planning, urbanism