Urban Vision For Gurgaon
Urban Vision For Gurgaon
Urban Vision For Gurgaon
URBAN VISION:
IN SEARCH OF A CIVIC SPACE
GGSIPU
BACHELOR IN ARCHITECTURE
BY
Kashmere Gate-110006
JANUARY 2010
GGSIP UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING
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Thesis Title
URBAN VISION:
IN SEARCH OF A CIVIC SPACE
Approval Certificate
The following study is hereby approved as a creditable work on the approved subject, carried out
It is to be understood that by this approval the undersigned does not necessarily endorse or
approve any statement made, opinion expressed or conclusions drawn therein, but approve the
study only for the purpose for which it is submitted and satisfies himself as to the requirements
THESIS PROPOSAL
Submitted by…
Aditya Tognatta
0451731605
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The journey has been long and there have been numerous co pilots. I‟d like to thank all of them.
First of all I would like to express my indebtedness towards my computer and the world wide
web, which stood by me at each and every second of my academic semester and after him, my
I‟d like to thank Prof. Rupinder Singh, my guide, who was persistent, patient and
considerate towards my idea and for planting all the seeds in my mind, directly or indirectly.
I would also like to thank our seminar coordinator Prof. Ashok lal for his consistent
guidance and update of the study, and for his immense support and consistent guidance that was
I‟d like to thank my friends who have been constantly the source of new ideas and who
gave me invaluable inputs. And it would not have been possible without Usap and its walls and
its memories.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
URBAN VISION
OBJECTIVE:
Provide Gurgaon with a sense of an identity through the projection of a city center, and
SCOPE:
Re-Planning of the city center over what is proposed by the Haryana Development
Authority in a more urbanist way, buy catering to the needs of the city. Then design a Civic
Center to provide common grounds for the denizens and various political authorities to interact
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
Make the city more inwards looking than spreading in a ad-hoc manner throughout
Provide the city with a more meaningful central space to exhibit the character of the city
METHODOLOGY
- Analysis of Gurgaon and generate a case for the requirement of a city center in the city.
- Creating a new Transit proposal for the city, to create a new approach towards the city.
- Re-design the complex keeping in mind the programme proposed by the HUDA in a
more urbanist way with the addition of some new programmes to enhance the character
of the city .
- Case studies of the few selected town hall and city center
city today.
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GURGAON TODAY
ANALYSIS
Today Gurgaon has a population of over 20 lakhs, and has set the precedents for
tomorrows planning to become one of the 12 megacities in the country. But, due to such
aspirations and lack of central governance what we see Gurgaon today is nothing more than ad-
hoc arrangements of buildings of various scale and sizes, the transit system is in a mess,
commercial use certainly has an monopoly over the others. all in all the city lacks an identity and
character of one city, due its stratified development over the years by various construction
companies.
STRATIFIED DEVELOPMENT
Due to unplanned and need based development over the recent years has led
Gurgaon to sratified zoning(see fig 1.1). This phenomenon became more evident in the recent
years of infrastructural boom in the city,as various construction and finance companies displayed
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the “land grab‟ frenzy. Today we see scattered developments in pockets of the region, with no
NATIONAL HIGHWAY.8 AS A
DIVIDER
villas. The nh-8 clearly marks this transition in the built fabric by dissecting the city into two
pieces.
TRANSIT
The primary reason Gurgaon exhibits transit problems is due to its inefficiency in
regulating intra- city traffic. The denizens use the national highway to cross to the other part of
the city, thus creating more mess on the national highway. These feeders into national highway
are the primary entry /exit points in and out of the city. At present there are about (8x2) feeders
leading into national highway, Out of which four primary ones are (iffco chowk, Rajeev chowk,
Raotula-ram chowk, Hero Honda chowk), One can never seems to miss them as they are
in portraying a central government character in the city. Due to PPP‟s and various construction
companies taking control of the land. The outskirts of the city are swarming with housing and
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On the whole what we get is a city that is not only divided through its physical layout but
through the development controls as well. There is a clear segregation in the way the old city
functions to the way the new city works, but what‟s common is the negligence in infrastructure
development and services required to sustain the population boom of the denizens.
OLD CITY
NEW CITY
Today Sector-29 is proposed as a city by Haryana Development authority. The most important
about this sector is its placement in the physical sense. It‟s not only centrally located but is
placed at the intersection of the National Highway-8 and the M.G Road which are the only two
entries and exit points from city towards New Delhi. This sector has the potential to stitch the
TOTAL GROUND COVERAGE : 220 Acres or 924317.55 sqm + 3, 46,928 sqm (parking)
AREA DETAIL…
3. CINEMA 2700
AUDITORIUM
6. DHARAMSHALA 2000
STATION
ANALYSIS
Continuous stretch of commercial tower on the frontal Entry /exit point directly from the
negating the meaning of a green buffer in front and eradicates freeway
the sense of any visual connection from the freeway.
Since this Scheme was developed before the national highway was transformed into a
freeway. It shows various entry/exit points from the national highway no.8 into a series of
commercial towers. Thus negating any sort of visual connection, furthermore it accentuates the
difference in the built fabric between the two dissected portions of the city. Thus, not helping in
SUSTAINABLITY
this scenario what more can be observed is the flawed road systems proposed by the Haryana
development organization. During peak hours these roads are going to be used by at least 10-15
lakhs people on daily basis. In other words the whole Zoning seems flawed with irregularities in
the turning radius and positions of the junctions. The developmental authorities are yet to
scheme for the citizen to use for activities. The whole sector
the whole the whole scheme is filled with flaws and it seems
In order to sustain this typology of development . Attempt has been made to amalgamate transit
systems and high density developments together, thus giving rise transit oriented develoment.
The new proposal is an attempt to smoothly regulate intra city traffic, by providing
parallel roads to the national highway no.8. This way we are able to control the number of
exit/entry points on the national highway, thus reducing the intra city traffic from the it. In
addition to this BRT routes have been proposed to make public transport more reachable to the
CASE STUDIES
translation of the transparency necessary for good governance and participatory democracy. The
idea of a city hall as a democratic space for citizens to see their city at work is well-entrenched in
Scandinavia and Northern Europe. Parallels can be drawn between BIG's design and Alvar
Aalto's famous 1952 Saynätsälo Town Hall in Finland, which also incorporated soaring, angled
roof forms, a courtyard, public commercial space on the ground floor, and was intended to be a
both directions. It requires adequate political overview of the problems, demands and desires of
the public, as well as public insight into the political processes. The new town hall of Tallinn will
provide this two way transparency in a very literal way. The various public departments form a
porous canopy above the public service market place allowing both daylight and view to
The public servants won‟t be some remote administrators taking decisions behind thick
walls, but will be visible in their daily work from all over the market place via the light wells and
courtyards. From outside the panoramic windows allow the citizens to see their city at work. In
reverse the public servants will be able to look out and into the market place‟s making sure that
the city and its citizens are never out of sight nor mind.
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The whole structure has been designed for maximum light penetration, reflective surfaces
.
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Structurally, the design is "a grouping of easily assembled individual frames that through
vierendeel frames free the connection of the city at ground level whilst simultaneously act as a
'group' to resist lateral loads. The result is an economic, fast-build adaptable solution,"
The roof of the tower is tilted forming a slender spire. Inside the City Council greeting hall is
accessed via the grand stair or elevators directly from the market place, or from the City offices
around it. Above the greeting hall, the City Council is located in a generous space illuminated
though a large window facing the city. A balcony for press and visitors flanks the space on the
level above. The sloping ceiling of the tower is finished in a large reflective material. The mirror
ceiling transforms the tower into a huge democratic periscope allowing literal transparency
between politicians and public. In ancient times the town hall would have a vaulted ceiling
decorated with a sky or frescos of the land and territories under the ruler‟s government. In the
new town hall of Tallinn the ceiling will be a real (reflected) overview of the city both old and
new. Whenever a politician raises his/her glance, he/she will be met with the view of Tallinn‟s
townscape. In reverse, the citizens, rallying protesters or simply people passing by, will look
towards the tower, and within it get an insight into the political work. The circular formation of
council members will be reflected in the tilted ceiling, and give the surrounding citizens a sense
of assurance that the democracy is busy working for them. In a traditional tower only the king at
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the top gets to enjoy the great view. The periscope is a form of democratic tower, where even the
average Tallinn citizen on the street gets to enjoy the overview from the top.
On the whole the Tallinn Hall creates an atmosphere where the citizens have the freedom
to express their views over national or local issues, moreover an ideal situation is created through
the transparency in the design .Where the denizens and public authorities can acknowledge each
other. The above design due its free ground plan also mixes boundaries between inside and
outside.
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CASE STUDYIES
CURITIBA:
City that rejected its Master Plan, For A Better Future…
Brazil is an emerging economy like India and has very similar issues—thus a look at the city of
Brazil was a Portuguese colony in the 16th century until they gained independence in
1822 as the Brazilian Empire, and the country had been a republic since 1899. It was one of the
last countries to ban slavery, but a resultant of that is a multi-ethnic population which traces its
origin from within the Americas, Southern Europe and Africa, Asia. These racial groups are
largely a Portuguese speaking and multiethnic society, Brazil is a melting point for varied ethnic
groups and there is racial tension—but the bigger issue is the difference between “haves” and
“have-nots.” Brazil has often been in the headlines for “flash-kidnapping,” and has their own
version of “encounter-specialists.” Like India, Brazil is one of the emerging economies and often
noted as part of the BASIC countries—it is at present the fifth most populous, and the eighth
largest economy by nominal GDP and the ninth largest by purchasing power parity.
Brazilian urbanism is marked by Rio de Janeiro—which will be the hosting the Olympics
in 2016—which is home to roughly 10 million people today and is not unlike Delhi and Mumbai.
In other words Rio‟s history is plagued by similar problems, including issues of compliance to
Master Plan1 and ever-changing government authorities with clashing ideas further worsening
the situation of the city, and these urban pressures reign all over Brazil. In this case which has
1
Donat Alfred Agache (1875-1959) is best known for Beaux- Arts master plan for Rio de Janeiro. He had an
important impact on Rio and on the development of modern Planning in Brazil, As he later on went on to do the
master plans for Sao Paulo and Curitiba. But his ideas were never realized fully due to political differences and
financial crisis. The Agache Plan was, however, one of the first comprehensive Master Plans in the modern sense. It
resulted from new requirement from federal that mandated municipalities to produce a master plan in order to
receive federal funds for capital improvements-from Fundo de Participacalo dos Municipios.
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done well with these issues is city of Curitiba. The capital of the state of Paraná, located in
southern Brazil having an area half the size of Delhi, with a metropolitan region population of
2.7 lakhs.
Curitiba has a six-decade-old history of formal urban design and planning. It started with
Agache Plan in 1943, designed by French urbanist Alfred Agache, when Curitiba had 120,000
inhabitants. Through the re structuring of the street network, this plan established guidelines for a
concentric growth of the city and provisions for land-use zoning, sanitation measures, the
distribution of open spaces, and the allocation of areas of urban expansion The plan assumed the
dominance of the automobile and the principle approach was massive infrastructure investments,
including construction of circular boulevards and major radial arteries similar to that of Lutyens
Delhi- the Civic center with local state and federal public agencies- commenced construction in
accordance in 1952.The master plan ostensibly aimed to provide the city a development scheme
that gave priority to public services such as sanitation, easing traffic congestion and creating
centers that enabled the growth of both social life and commerce.
Curitiba‟s population reached 180,000 inhabitants at annual growth rate of over seven
percent in the 1955-more than what Agache plan had anticipated and only 10% of the Master
plan had been realized by then. Then when the country hit rock bottom on financial fronts and
the progress was halted. By the 60s, Curitiba's population had ballooned to 430,000, and
financial turmoil only worsened and some feared that the growth in population threatened to
drastically change the character of the city. The 1943 master plan was seen as inadequate in
addressing this dire situation—because the large open Baroque boulevards were very expensive
to construct, difficult to maintain and did not service the largest segment of the population,
which was bus-bound. Consequently, the Mayor Ivo Aruza immediately dismissed the master
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plan. This called for a rather radical but a sustainable approach towards urban planning that
would not only save the city from the current scenario but also pave a path towards a better life
In 1964, the Mayor solicited proposals for the same2. Architect Jaime Lerner3, who later
also became mayor of Curitiba, led a team from the Universidade Federal do Paraná that
suggested strict controls on urban sprawl, a reduction of traffic in the downtown area,
preservation of Curitiba's Historic Sector, and a convenient and affordable public transit system.
But not a Master Plan to do the same. These were more like guidelines. These directives led to
the formalization of the principle directive of the preliminary plan of 1965(“subsequently know
as the Master Plan”) which aimed to transform the city‟s radial configuration of growth to a
By this time, Curitiba had almost 500,000 inhabitants and an annual growth rate of 5.6 percent.
Not like Agache‟s Plan. Which was based on concentric circles, the Plano diretor was based on a
city growth concept of, linear expansion of city from its center, employing integrated
transportation of growth, the promotion of industry, and the improvement of the environmental
The Plano diretor 4conceived major physical interventions in the city, including a
number of significant urban design projects. The greatest intervention was the creation of the
five structural axes of transportation radiating from the center of the city, guiding the direction
and concentration of growth. The structural axes plan combined massive public transportation
infrastructure with zoning that allowed mixed uses and significant density. Although the zoning
had begun with the precious plan in the 1950‟s, the new plan instituted creative approaches to
shaping the urban fabric, channeling growth and defining the establishment of specific zones
such as central zone, the structural Sectors for business and other services, and residential Zones.
4
The Plano diretor is the Portuguese word for urban master plan guidelines
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Residential growth was encouraged near street with concentrations of transportation and
services. Special interest Preservation Units were established to restore buildings of historical
significance. It also laid the guiding principle that mobility and land use cannot be disassociated
with each other if the city's future design is to succeed. In order to fulfill these goals of providing
access for all citizens, the main transport arteries were modified over time to give public
This approach not only bought about a new revelation in urban planning but also made
the inhabitants realize the importance of transport in cities, which in Delhi has always been given
a back seat considering the previous state of affairs. I will discuss here three key aspects of this
Firstly-One of major directives derived from the new Plano diretor was the creation in
1966 of the institute of urban research and Planning of Curitiba (IPPUC) to implement the plan
and to develop all complementary projects. IPPUC established a team of planners working
outside the institutional framework, able to respond to developmental pressures with agility.
Since its founding, IPPUC has efficiently led the transformation of Curitiba physical structures,
IPPUC also paid attention to the preservation of the city‟s history and enhancement of its
identity with the help of Revitalization Plan for Historic District in Curitiba. In 1971 the first
revitalization plans was established, resulting in the variation of cultural facilities as well as the
orchestras, art workshops, theatres, and museums; an old army headquarters facility was
transformed into the Curitiba Cultural Foundation; a gunpowder deposit became theaters; and a
glue factory became the Creativity Center. In 1972, the city‟s first main street-Rua XV de
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Novembro-became Brazil‟s first pedestrian mall.5Later its popularity made it a model emulated
The success of Curitiban planning primarily comes from the cohesion of various public
offices working in parity6, and delivering rapid action strategies required in time for smooth
function of the city. Just like revitalization plan in the 1970-That transformed old vacant
buildings, and the slum relocation plan 1976- To assist families living in squatter settlements in
risk areas were introduced to comprehend the rapid growth of the city.
for much less investment- has been the transportation program(cerevo,1195; Ravinovitch and
lietman, 1993) The structural main transit axes began to operate in 1974, significantly, the
transportation program has been used to promote development along these axes. A new street
system created priority avenues, and re direct traffic away from downtown by establishing
connector streets between neighborhoods and major avenues. Also at this time new streets were
built to connect established avenues, and new traffic circulation patterns were established. The
5
The way this action was carried out was very bold and fast. Quick implementation has been a hallmark of the
Curitiba experience. The pedestrian mall was built during a weekend to prevent opposing shop owners from taking
any legal action against it until it was too late. Then, children were invited to hold a painting fair in the middle of the
street, further preventing any action against the works. Curitiba‟s mayor convinced the opposition to give the project
a try. Meanwhile, the children‟s fair became a weekly event.
6
It is relevant to note here that the coincidence of interest groups around a major vision is also a key in the
development of the Curitiba experience, together with the concurrency of the three aforementioned factors, namely,
the creation of supportive political institutions, the continuation of political regimes, and the participation of elites.
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ternary System was also established were principle artery was divided into three parts…The
three- tier road system of each axis is made up of one central street with exclusive lanes for
efficient public transportation and slow local access traffic lanes with parking. To either side of
the central street are one-way Arterial Street of traffic (express lanes) headed into or away from
the downtown area. This road system was created through a re-definition of the existing street,
system introduced demarcating a clear direction for the growth of the city and the primary tool
that helped to achieve this was land use planning. The land use here is reconfigured into built-
form—importance was given not to assign single-use zones, rather the correlation of built form
with transit system. TOD before the term was canonized. The road hierarchy was directly
responsible for the density of the built form. The highest density of residential and commercial
development are concentrated in the two blocks at the center of the spine, with diminishing
densities in the blocks to either side, thus preserving large areas for low-rise residential
As the need for economic support for a city that was growing at rates higher than five
percent a year in the 1960‟s led to the creation of Curitiba‟s industrial district(cidade industrial
de Curitiba, CIC), and special connecting sectors were designated to effectively integrate the
industrial district into the rest of the city. The CIC was designed with suitable urban
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infrastructure, providing basic services, housing, preservation areas, and integration with urban
transit system.
percent a year. This reasoned out the need for zoning for specific purposes and occupation
parameters guided public and private investments and projects in Curitiba. A 1975 law further
defined land use in the city, creating areas for residential, services, manufacturing, and rural
activities. The law also defined structural sectors, pedestrian areas, natural and riverside
preservation areas, parks, and the Historic District. To solve environmental problems in fragile
Thirdly- The transit system began to operate in the year 1974, when architect Jaime
Lerner was the Mayor of Curitiba, in coordination with the Master Plan they began to construct
the first two out of five arterial structural roads that would eventually form the structural growth
corridors and dictate the growth pattern in the city. These structural corridors were composed of
a triple road system with the central road having two restricted lanes dedicated to express busses.
These restricted buses lanes succeeded in providing excellent access and mobility. The two
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features essential for the success of this all-bus network transit system are7 (1) reliable high-
capacity buses running along trunk lines on the structural axes where the greatest population
lives and works, featuring exclusive lanes with a limited number of cross streets, signal pre-
emption, high platforms for entry and exit, and pre-paid boarding; and (2) a complementary
network of color-coded feeder and express buses, all with free transfer, providing dense coverage
Next is the question of the acceptance of such an all-bus system by the citizens as the
fares of the bus transit system reflected the operational cost of each line separately. Because they
were less lucrative, the longer lines had higher fares, posing high costs for the low-income
population located at the periphery of the city. The government began what came to be known as
„single fare‟ with one single fare reflecting the cost of the entire system, persons commuting long
distances (often the low-income population) are subsidized by those making shorter trips.
Besides being socially just, the single fare facilitated the implementation of fare integration
between different companies. It was estimated that around 80% of users benefited by the
integration.
7
Curiously enough, alcohol-fueled buses were indeed used for tourist routes. This tells us that the government was-
aware of the greater ecological value of the alcohol-base buses, and wanted their use to be linked to the image of the
city and the environmental concerns it carried with them.
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The bus system is organized by URBS (Urbanization of Curitiba S/A), the public
transportation corporation, and 16 private companies are sub-contracted to operate and maintain
the buses. In 1986 the operating companies, which until then had received income directly from
their passengers, changed to a system whereby they were paid per kilometer. The municipal
government collects detailed operational information (fleet, timetable, kilometers run, etc.),
audits the implementation, collects income received daily from the whole system, and pays the
operators for services rendered in real costs. Detailed regulations establish the rights and
obligations of the operating companies, define the faults and penalties, and seek to eliminate
waste while constantly improving the quality of service. This arrangement ensures the fair
distribution of income among operators and prevents unhealthy competition among drivers over
specific routes.
The Tube Station, started in 1984, is a bus platform elevated to the level of the
entrances/exits of the bus, where automatic doors operated by the tube conductor open parallel to
the bus doors. Passengers pay an entrance fare at the turnstile and wait for their respective direct
or express bus to pass. Disembarking passengers leave the stations through a direct exit. The
Tube can allow controlled access and safe and secure embarkation. The establishment of the
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Tube Stations guarantees that the bi-articulated buses have the necessary operational conditions
to support the growth in demand predicted for the next coming years. The bi-articulated bus has
a large capacity (270passengers) and travels in an exclusive lane. It has no steps or fare
collection and use the Tube Station for passenger embarking and disembarking. The first line
was implemented in December 1992, with 33 vehicles carrying 100,000 passengers per day on
The low congestion consequently made it easier to promote other means of travel in the
city center. Hence, the city created a pedestrian network, covering an area equivalent to nearly
fifty blocks, in the downtown area. Although at first local merchants were opposed to the idea,
they quickly found the pedestrian zone to be a tremendous economic boost; much more space
was available in the area for customers rather than vehicles, the shopping environment was more
pleasant, and people had more time to shop when they did not have to drive and park. Bus
terminals on the periphery provide frequent access to the area. Furthermore, the Curitiba Public
Works Plan for 1992 calls for 150 km of bicycle paths to be built, following river bottom valleys
and railway tracks and connecting the city's districts to make the entire city accessible to
bicycles.
Due to the system design with special lanes, prepaid passenger boarding and the priority
the buses receive in road hierarchy, the bus system can operate with a much higher capacity than
traditional city bus systems. In terms of cost-effectiveness, the bi-articulated bus system in
Curitiba is very effective with the cost of U.S.$3 million per kilometer to construct compared
with U.S.$8-12 million per kilometer for a tram system and around U.S.$50-100 million per
kilometer for a subway. The new system offered riders greater comfort, and operating costs fell
6% lower than the other systems. The new system has evolved since then linking downtown to
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the neighborhoods through exclusive traffic lanes. The lanes enable a considerably higher
average bus speed without jeopardizing passenger safety. Today there are now 58 Km of
exclusive bus lanes which crisscross the city along all the cardinal directions. The structural axes
created are complemented by 270 km of feeder routes and 185 Km of inter- district routes,
serving about 65% of the urban area. The integrated Transportation Network promoted the use of
public transport and reduced the use of private cars. Around 1.9 million passengers use the bus
transit system daily with an 89% user satisfaction rate. This change reduces congestion, fuel
consumption, and air pollution, and result in a better environment for the entire population.
Actually, Curitiba has shown one of the lowest levels of ambient air pollution in Brazil.
The most crucial piece or the crown jewel in this whole scheme would be the green
intervention done by the city planners, they managed not only to reclaim land from low lying
basins in the regions but proposed and intervened larger green spaces interlinked with each other
forming a network throughout the city, thus preserving the ecological life present in the lakes and
maintaining an ecological balance with the forces of nature. The city has about 50 square meters
of parkland per person (i.e. 12 acres per 1000), most of which has been created in the last 30
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years. The protected land is complemented by compact housing, as the city of 1.5 million has a
population density of 10,750 per square mile (which is around the same as Philadelphia or
Washington, D.C.).
Roughly 21 million square meters (5,190 acres) are linear parks along rivers and streams
that act as buffers between flood-prone rivers and the city. Legislation set aside certain low-lying
areas and river basins as special protection and management areas. The city also used a loan to
purchase land at a number of critical sites around the city. Engineers built small damns and
created new lakes that act as holding basins when flooding occurs. In effect, these green spaces
None of this would have been achieved if a Master Plan was being followed. The mass
transit integration was only possible when one realizes the clear co-relation of land use and
transit. Today, Curitiba boasts 70% of the citizens use the public transit systems instead of
private automobiles. This reduction in automobile use in seen regardless of the fact that, Curitiba
has among the highest household incomes and the second highest automobile ownership rate in
Brazil. If a master plan was being followed it would have taken years beyond reckoning to built
the infrastructure prior to the implementation of the master plan- Delivering the city into the a
state of chaos, The dismissal of the master plan came as a blessing in disguise for the Curitibans-
They could run a number of programmes simultaneously, with the formulation of strategies and
even structure new strategies for upcoming problems in the city. Thus, Making the city
economically sustainable in itself, and harnessing prospects for future growth as a pollution free
city. The scenario would not be the same, if a master plan was been followed. The reason being
that even for a microscopic change or addition of new interventions takes months even years of
approval and discussion in the state assembly for them to be inculcated in the master plan.
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Today the planning effort of the city of Curitiba is a model for how to integrate
and local community development without a master plan. The city thrives as a unique example of
how transit oriented development can help evolve cities into more livable urban environments.
It‟s a city that has valued three primary aspects that are essential for the future of the society:
mobility, sustainability, and identity. There are four key elements in the success story of
Curitiba…
First, a low cost metropolitan transport system. By utilizing the existing corridors and
adopting measures to intensify development along these corridor roads, public transport systems
can be established at relatively low cost. This low-cost public transportation system showed the
ability to more quickly and more effectively serve an entire metropolitan population.
Second, the integration of land use, road systems and mass transit is a powerful tool.
Through the use of land-use instruments, local governments can direct population growth and
Third, vision, leadership, and flexibility lead to success of urban planning. Curitiba is one
of the few cities that realized its urban intention. The factors of Curitiba‟s success are these: a
clear long-term vision, strong leadership to implement the plan, and flexibility in adjustments by
Fourth, understanding the people and your society. The sole purpose of planning a city is
to create a livable environment for the citizens to thrive for the construction of a successful city.
One that understands the needs of the people. At the core of Curitiba's success is the vision of a
city as a structure where people both live and work. Citizens are happy in their environment and
take pride in their city because they are creating and maintaining systems that work, such as
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transportation, recreation, and education. As Lerner states, the city has become "more intelligent
and more humane," (Curitiba video, 1992) and, above all, there is a strong sense of solidarity
among citizens
TO SUSTAIN
common parking systemfor accessing the building without crossing the road
Multiple looping system for better and efficient road networking, this also includes features like
direct access from periphery roads for destination traffic via a joint parking mechanism
underground, resulting in the decongestion of the internal roads during peak hours
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implementation.
or projects may not achieve the desired result. However, valuable learning and experience is
IT’S ABOUT FLEXIBILITY: No matter how well a plan is thought out or researched during
its preparation, there will always be new information, circumstances, opportunities or ideas that
present themselves that may require a different approach than originally planned. The
implementation of the Plan will be fexible to achieve the best possible outcome that is
IT’S ABOUT COLLABORATION: Great things can be achieved when the talents and
resources of many work together toward common objectives.The scale and scope of
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what is envisioned in the Centre City will require collaborative efforts involving diverse
interests, including government, education, business, arts and culture, community and
Podium of high rise runs like a continuous colonnade maintaining human scale proportion
Final Renders....
Aerial View Of The Scheme
Final Model
Aerial View
F.A.R: 100
HEIGHT RESTRICTION : 30 M
AREA PROGRAMME
ADIMINISTRATION BLOCK
Director 48
Staff 35
Admin. Office 20
Director‟s Toilet 10
Public Toilet 25
388
EXHIBITION AREA
Staff 35
Repair Workshop 90
Inspection Room 50
1175
LIBRARY
Foyer 100
Librarian 40
Store 30
Photostat 15
Toilet 30
580
Foyer 250
Main Stage+Wings 80
Projection Room 10
G. green room 30
L. green room 30
Toilet 60
Snack Bar 12
Ticket 12
Backstage 60
994
Seating 150
Stage 25
G.Green room 20
L.Ladies room 20
Store 12
227
CONFERENCE ROOMS
810
BANQUET
Hall I 850
Hall II 850
Foyer 500
Lawn 1000
3200
OFFICES
100 X 20 2000
300 X 10 3000
5000
GUEST ROOMS
WORKSHOPS AND
MAT.LIBRARIES 1000
5050
17424
20909
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CIVIC CENTRE
DESIGN DEVLOPS...
Stage I
Making Connections!!!!
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Stage II
creating urban vistas by treating the civic center as an screen between the civic and the non civic
domain
final blocking...
Stage III
Perforating the block to create hegemonic civic space
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Creating Perforations
Final Plans
Ground Floor
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