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Building and Unbuilding the City Museum -

Building and Unbuilding the City Museum

From Le Corbusier to Ahmedabad

Sarosh Anklesaria, Lily Chi (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
278 Seiten
2026
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-032-97358-6 (ISBN)
CHF 249,95 inkl. MwSt
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Sanskar Kendra stands as one of Le Corbusier's lesser-known architectural achievements, a cultural center designed for post-independence Ahmedabad that now faces an uncertain future. This book examines Sanskar Kendra both as a physical artifact and as a site of broader cultural debates.

Originally conceived as a Citizens' Cultural Center to serve India's emerging modern society, the building was intentionally designed as an alternative to colonial and European museum models. Today, however, the abandoned structure seems increasingly disconnected from the rapidly changing city growing around it. Through detailed analysis of the project's ambitious beginnings and the debates surrounding its potential demolition, the collection explores themes ranging from concrete construction techniques to questions about who gets included—and excluded—from public cultural spaces. The essays bring together local and international perspectives on pressing contemporary issues: how we care for and maintain our built environments, what it means to create truly participatory public spaces in an age of market-driven development, and how design can serve as a tool for social change. Two of the chapters take a visual approach to these questions. Award-winning architectural photographer Randhir Singh contributes a photo essay that captures the building's current state, while another chapter presents speculative architectural designs that imagine alternative futures for Sanskar Kendra. The book concludes with renowned architect B.V. Doshi's reflections on the architect's responsibility to society.

This book will appeal to scholars, educators, and students working in architectural theory, history, and design education. It's also valuable for readers interested in visual culture, urban studies, museum and curatorial studies, and South Asian studies.

Sarosh Anklesaria is associate teaching professor and Track Chair of Carnegie Mellon University’s Master of Architecture program. Educated at CEPT University, Ahmedabad (Dip.Arch) and Cornell University (M.Arch), he has practiced in the United States, Switzerland, and India. His research and design advance architecture at the intersection of spatial justice and ecology in the built environment—recent projects address aging modernism in South Asia and architectures of just transitions in post- and deindustrializing contexts. Lily Chi is associate professor of architectural design, theory and history at Cornell University. She received her B.Arch in Canada and her M.Phil and Ph.D in architectural history and theory at Cambridge and McGill Universities. Her current work examines the agency of built space as posed in post-war efforts to counter the effects of industrial capitalism on the urban everyday. Chi is co-editor of Seeding Urban Transformation (Palgrave Macmillon, 2026).

0. Introduction A Walk through Sanskar Kendra (Sarosh Anklesaria) The Terms of Debate (Lily Chi) Dormant City Museum: A Photo Essay (Randhir Singh) Part One: Situating Sanskar Kendra: Histories and Context 1. Negotiating the Local and the Universal, the Client and the Architect at Sanskar Kendra (Daniel Williamson) 2. Reading the Museum as Infrastructure: From the Mundaneum to Sanskar Kendra (Sarosh Anklesaria) 3. Similarities and Differences of Le Corbusier’s Museums at Ahmedabad, Tokyo, and Chandigarh (Maria Cecilia O’Byrne) 4. “Exposing” Concrete: The Constructional Legacies of the City Museum (Gauri Bharat and Mallika Nyshadham) Part Two: Critiques and Redirections 5. Ahmedabad: The Middle-Class Megacity (Mona Mehta) 6. Sanskar Kendra: Re-membering the Cultural Centre (Shubhra Raje and Riyaz Tayyibji) 7. Reflections on the Making of the Bihar Museum and the Conflictorium (Batul Raaj Mehta and Avni Sethi) 8. Sanskar Kendra Today: Is my Modernism Your Millstone? (A Conversation with Mrinalini Rajagopalan) Part Three: Learning from Sanskar Kendra 9. Disarticulating Architecture (Lily Chi) 10. Refractions on Sanskar Kendra (Lily Chi and Sarosh Anklesaria) 11. B.V Doshi on the Responsibilities of the Architect (A Conversation with Students).

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.3.2026
Reihe/Serie Routledge Research in Architecture
Zusatzinfo 7 Line drawings, color; 31 Line drawings, black and white; 11 Halftones, color; 35 Halftones, black and white; 18 Illustrations, color; 66 Illustrations, black and white
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Hilfswissenschaften
Sozialwissenschaften
Technik Bauwesen
ISBN-10 1-032-97358-7 / 1032973587
ISBN-13 978-1-032-97358-6 / 9781032973586
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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