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Heritage in 2017: Delhi lost Hall of Nations, Ahmedabad won UNESCO tag

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New Delhi: Bengaluru lost an over 100-year- old priceless city landmark to demolition, a modern architectural marvel was torn down in Delhi while Ahmedabad became India’s first World Heritage City in the year gone by.

In 2017, damage and dismantling of heritage properties dominated the headlines, but news of UNESCO honours provided moments of cheer.

In Bengaluru, Krumbiegel Hall, named after the legendary landscape architect G H Krumbiegel of Lalbagh gardens fame and lying in neglect for years, was dismantled late November by authorities, sparking outrage.

The irony could not have been more pronounced, as the iconic building in the famed garden of Bengaluru was bulldozed to a pile of rubble, with the timing coinciding with the World Heritage Week.

Tales of decay and neglect of heritage preceded the demolition in eastern part of the country in the year gone by, with a landmark house in Patna, where Mahatma Gandhi had stayed during his first visit to Bihar in 1917, being demolished.

In early 2017, the middle portion of the house, privately owned, was demolished leaving a wide and horrendous void between the two parts left on each side, highlighting the vulnerability of unprotected heritage buildings in Patna.

Incidentally, heritage activists had been demanding conservation of that house and with Bihar government celebrating Champaran Satyagrah centenary in a big way, there was hope that the landmark would be declared protected.

But, in a stroke of graver irony, the demolition coincided with the year of centenary. The charming house built in European style had lost its glory long ago, with a multi- storeyed complex erected a few decades ago on what was once its famed garden, eclipsing its view from the main street.

The Hall of Nations and the Hall of Industries, two of the national capital’s iconic modern architectural landmarks, built in 1970s and celebrated globally, were dismantled in April, after its architect Raj Rewal and INTACH lost a legal battle with the government.

Possibly, India’s first pillarless structure, the Centre’s move to demolish it, to to make way for a state-of the-art exhibition-cum-convention complex, was met with impassioned pleas from art houses and galleries globally, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

In Old Delhi, walls of a heritage precinct in Shahjehanabad, abutting a listed haveli were spray-painted by a well-known private shoemaker firm as part of a shoot of a campaign video in September.

A little over a month later, INTACH Delhi after learning of the episode, expressed outrage over the act which galvanised into a public outcry, prompting apology from the company which also promised to restore tell look-and-feel of the wall.

The capital’s Coronation Park too made headlines for all the awful reasons, as the iconic obelisk on its ground commemorating the 1911 Delhi Durbar, stood defaced on its anniversary.

But, amid these moments of loss and decay, a rare honour came by for India in the month of July, and with it a big responsibility.

Ahmedabad, the city endowed with rich architectural and cultural heritage was declared by UNESCO as a World Heritage City, the first such honour for India, but experts have cautioned that defending the title is the next step for the city after earning it, given the rapid urbanisation.

November also brought some cheerful news for heritage lovers, as two grand restoration projects in Mumbai — Royal Opera House and Christ Church — and a temple in Tamil Nadu, won the Award of Merit in the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation.

Besides, the over 150-year-old Wellington Fountain and Bomonjee Hormarjee Wadia Fountain and Clock Tower in Mumbai, also earned an honourable mention in the award, which also included Dharampura Haveli in Old Delhi and a fort in Madhya Pradesh.

Noted conservation architect Vikas Dilawari, who helmed the Christ Church project in Byculla and the restoration of the two Mumbai fountains, is hoping that 2018 would bode better for country’s built heritage.

“Conserving our built heritage is a constant battle, with insensitive development always as a threat to it. Good to see that some efforts were rewarded.

“For future, we can hope government, at all levels, is more sympathetic to conservation. We have smart cities, SEZ etc, but why not our own heritage city branding. Daman, Puducherry, Chandigarh, do classify under it,” Dilawari told PTI. (PTI)

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