View from Dhaka: Dhaka's complex and troubled history has produced much fine and very varied architecture. Now, second-rate buildings and lack of planning threaten the city. (View).The crucial question that confronts DHAKA, the capital of Bangladesh, is whether it can exist as a decent and liveable live·a·ble adj. Variant of livable. Adj. 1. liveable - fit or suitable to live in or with; "livable conditions" livable city. To judge from its current architectural and planning scenario, it would be difficult to answer in the affirmative. Although a great deal of building activity is going on in this city, it hardly provides much reason to celebrate when the resulting environment is considered. Buildings of various types and heights are going up, while open spaces and water rapidly disappear, the roads remain clogged and the air becomes ever fouler. Dhaka perhaps is proving that sheer building activity is not enough to make a decent and liveable city. Dhaka is a city with architecture that bears witness to more than 400 years of her history. Though the city came to prominence with the advent of the Mughals in Bengal, there are traces of her existence before the coming of the Mughals and a few architectural remains testify to that existence. From 1610 to 1717 Dhaka remained the capital of the Mughal province of Bengal and during that period a number of important monuments were constructed, which included mosques, tombs, forts, caravanserais and bridges. In 1717 the capital shifted to Murshidabad, a move that initiated a period of steady decline of the city, which continued into the nineteenth century. This coincided with the decline of Mughal rule and the ascent of the British in the province. The British had founded Calcutta and made it: their principal city, while Dhaka was reduced to the status of a mere district headquarters. In the second quarter of the nineteenth century however, under the initiative of the colonial administrators and the local elite, Dhaka experienced a programme of renewal and rejuvenation Rejuvenation Aeson in extreme old age, restored to youth by Medea. [Rom. Myth.: LLEI, I: 322] apples of perpetual youth by tasting the golden apples kept by Idhunn, the gods preserved their youth. [Scand. Myth. . It started to grow again; new areas were laid out with new buildings and the city grew in stature as an administrative, educational and commercial centre. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Dhaka became the capital of the newly formed province of East Bengal This article is about the historic province of East Bengal. For the East Bengal Football Club, see East Bengal Club. East Bengal was the name used during two periods in the 20th century for a territory that roughly corresponded to the modern state of and Assam, ushering in Noun 1. ushering in - the introduction of something new; "it signalled the ushering in of a new era" first appearance, introduction, debut, entry, launching, unveiling - the act of beginning something new; "they looked forward to the debut of their new product line" a new beginning for the city. A flurry of building activity followed: administrative, educational, cultural and residential buildings from the period now constitute the bulk of Dhaka's colonial architecture Colonial architecture: see American architecture. . But its status as regional capital was short-lived: with the annulment annulment Legal invalidation of a marriage. It announces the invalidity of a marriage that was void from its inception. It is to be distinguished from dissolution or divorce. To justify annulment, the marriage contract must have a defect (e.g. of the Partition in 1911, it reverted back to a district town. The Partition of India The Partition of India is the process that led to the creation, on 14 August 1947 and 15 August 1947, respectively, of the sovereign states of Dominion of Pakistan (later Islamic Republic of Pakistan) and Union of India (later Republic of India) upon the granting of independence in 1947 brought yet another change for Dhaka when it became the capital of the eastern province of the newly formed state of Pakistan. The post-colonial period saw the coming of modernity in architecture and in 1955, Muzharul Islam Muzharul Islam is the pioneer architect of Bangladesh and the one of the most influential master architects of the Indian subcontinent during the modern era. Born in 1923 in Bangladesh, his work from the 1950s onwards not only signaled the advent of Modernism in Bangladesh , the doyen of Bangladeshi contemporary architecture, had the city's first two modern buildings constructed. The Public Library (now Dhaka University Library) and the Art College, both located on the Dhaka University campus, marked a distinct and definitive change in the architectural scene of Dhaka. It is of course the Capital Complex by Louis Kahn Louis Isadore Kahn (born Itze-Leib Schmuilowsky) (February 20, 1901 or 1902 – March 17, 1974) was a world-renowned architect based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After working in various capacities for several firms in Philadelphia, he founded his own firm in 1935. that puts Dhaka prominently in the record of events of twentieth-century world architecture. Muzharul Islam was also instrumental in getting Kahn the commission for the Capital Complex. A shortage of architects in the country at the time necessitated the involvement of architects from abroad and a number of significant public buildings in Dhaka were designed by them. In 1971, Dhaka emerged as the capital of an independent country -- Bangladesh. Since then, Dhaka has had phenomenal growth, and it continues to grow, but due to the absence of proper planning and urban design guidelines, the majority of recent buildings fail to create any serious architectural impact, nor do they improve the quality of life. Nowadays the architectural and planning vision in Dhaka does not extend beyond the individual building lot. Within 50 years of having experienced a significant architectural beginning, Dhaka has been transformed into a place that can be easily described as an urban disaster. Most of this transformation has taken place in the last ten years or so -- more sparkling buildings, more flashy cars, a greater sense of hustle and bustle. The city has become everything except a city. It has become a gigantic, bustling, bursting urban agglomeration ag·glom·er·a·tion n. 1. The act or process of gathering into a mass. 2. A confused or jumbled mass: . The death of Louis Kahn in 1974. and the sidelining of Muzharul Islam in a changed political scene after 1975 deprived Dhaka of finer thinking and meaningful approaches to architecture and urban planning urban planning: see city planning. urban planning Programs pursued as a means of improving the urban environment and achieving certain social and economic objectives. . There are a few works by architects of later generations where attempts to fuse Western modernity with local traditions or the development of distinct styles are visible. The Martyrs' Memorial For the Iraqi memorial in Baghdad, see . The Martyrs' Memorial is an imposing stone monument positioned at the intersection of St Giles', Magdalen Street and Beaumont Street in Oxford, England just outside Balliol College. It commemorates the 16th-century Oxford Martyrs. by Mainul Hossain, housing complexes by Bashirul Haq, S.O.S Youth Village and School by Raziul Ahsan and the Independence Monument by Urbana Architects are a few examples. To overcome the crisis in architecture and urban planning that Dhaka is experiencing will require an effort of greater magnitude. Architects and planners working in this city certainly need to shoulder greater professional and social responsibility. By launching a sustained campaign based on a clearly delineated de·lin·e·ate tr.v. de·lin·e·at·ed, de·lin·e·at·ing, de·lin·e·ates 1. To draw or trace the outline of; sketch out. 2. To represent pictorially; depict. 3. long-term idea, they can begin the process of reversing the continuous deterioration of the urban environment of Dhaka. Saif Ul Haque is an architect practising in Dhaka |
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