Abstract

This paper describes a project undertaken by the authors during their post-graduate studies at the University of Shefield. The intent of the project was to identify building(s) that need up-gradation/retroit, establish why retroit is required, what kind of retroit is needed and which techniques to employ, using a case-sensitive approach. However, the scope of this paper is limited to the irst two objectives of the project and the recognition of retroit techniques is left open-ended so as to leave room for future debates and deliberations.The city of Chandigarh has always been highlight prominently on India’s architectural heritage map. Various buildings designed by Le Corbusier and his team (comprising Pierre Jeanerette, Jane Drew and Maxwell Fry) are like jewels (to be treasured) on this map. Still, ever since these buildings, especially the government housings, came into existence, no systematic procedures have been undertaken to analyse and assess their deterioration with time and usage. Passing down the streets of Chandigarh, one would observe how drastically the housings have been modiied, and in some cases, have lost their original appeal.The paper is essentially drafted in three parts. The irst part illustrates the conditions and political background in which these buildings were designed, so as to better understand the essence of this architecture. The second part tries to comprehend the current state of one of the many types of the Government Housings present in Chandigarh – the ‘House Type E1’ in Panjab University. Lastly, the authors use various scales, like present seismic byelaws and Computer Aided simulation tools, to evaluate how the given housing now fares in terms of structural stability and thermal & visual comfort.

Highlights

  • Chandigarh, the ‘City Beautiful’, was conceived as a modern city in the newly independent India

  • Chandigarh is indebted to Le Corbusier for the planning and designing of the large scale government buildings that lend the city a character of sculptural monumentality; the city’s urban character evolved mainly because of the modest architecture of the Government housings

  • “Taking Chandigarh as an example, we may see at once the democratic idea which allows us to devote an equal care to housing all classes of society, to seek new social groupings, new patterns of education and public welfare, and made more possible by practical application of the scientific idea which, through industrialism, gives us such benefits as piped water, electricity, cheap transport and the like

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Summary

Introduction

Chandigarh, the ‘City Beautiful’, was conceived as a modern city in the newly independent India. A big chunk of the original architecture in Chandigarh is constituted by the Government Housings built during the 1950s and 1960s. These housings were designed with utmost care, keeping in mind the climate and the monetary conditions of the state, they have served well to this day as protective shelters for the people in the composite climate of the region. A time has come when these buildings, which form the bulk of the modern heritage of Chandigarh, need to be retroitted and upgraded to suit the needs of the people and the fast changing climate so that they are suitable to live in for, at least, the 40-50 years. The idea of retroitting stands strongly in favour of sustainable practices since the carbon footprint of a building is decreased by making most use of the embedded energy and makes them structurally stable

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