Housing With Authority
Housing With Authority
Housing With Authority
Signature of Author:
Soni Gupta Department of Architecture, May 10, 1991
Certified by:
John deMonchaux / ofessor of Architecture and Urban Studies, Thesis Supervisor
Dean, School of Architecture and Planning
Accepted by:
Julian Beinart De 5 ental Committef f1brGraduate Students Chairman
OF TECEMOLOGY
JUN 0 11991
L18 RIEC
" iWRO,
Housing with Authority
The role of public and private architects in public housing in Delhi
by
Soni Gupta
Submitted to the Department of Architecture on May 10th, 1991
in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of
Master of Science in Architecture Studies
Abstract
The main concern of this thesis is the role of the architect in the design and production
of public housing. The argument presented here is that the method of procurement of
architectural skills affects the architectural quality of the product, and that architectural design is
driven by more than professional 'idealism'.
The case studies that form the basis for the discussion are two middle income housing
projects built by the Delhi Development Authority (DDA). One was designed in-house by
DDA architects and the second by a private architect. Working within similar constraints of
economy, bureaucratic requirements and time, the results produced were very different. On the
basis of the difference in architectural quality, I analyse the methods of procurement of
architectural skills, for both the private and the in-house architect.
The issues that were raised by the case studies as being the part of the process of
procurement were categorized into four broad areas: (i) The DDA and its administration of
architectural skills; (ii) the nature of housing as the product; (iii) the nature of the professional
establishments; and (iv) the architects , themselves as professionals.
The process of procuring architectural skills had implications on the architect's
performance and his response to design issues. Thus, the qualities of livability, efficiency of
land use and aesthetic design that were present in one project and not in the other were linked to
the fragmentation of work in the professional system, the manner in which compensation for
work was made, the nature of the project itself, in terms of visibility. They also had to do with
the staffing of the architectural offices and the research carried out by them.
Rather than make normative judgments about the quality of the projects, this thesis
identifies the constraints under which decisions were made by the architects in both cases and
highlights the issues that lay behind them.
Like everything else, this thesis is for my parents, for their support, encouragement and bottomless
faith.
I would like to acknowledge the tremendous role that Prem played, for the data-collection and
frantic mailings that made the thesis possible from this continent. I extend thanks to my advisor,
John deMonchaux, for finding time in his strained calender to offer guidance and advice; my
reader, Professor Lawrence Vale, who read the rambling drafts and strove to make sense of them,
I would like to thank for his time and interest. I would also like to thank Professor William
Doebele for his patience and thoughtfulness, and for the vital encouragement.
The thesis process was made bearable by the presence of friends - Anu provided the support and
the laughs, both deliberately arid unwittingly! Geno was the link to the normal world, and provided
crucial comments on the drafts. Maitreyi and Avik, for all those calls to the studio and food to
sustain us, a heartfelt thanks. I would like to thank Kelly for his thoughtfulness and Archival
Bonding, and for all the encouraging pats on the back.
However, this thesis and its author would be long gone, were it not for Dave's support,
encouragement and unflagging help. Without him, the thesis experience would have been a lonely
one.And having made it to the end, even the production would have collapsed, but for his painful
edits, tireless typing, and excitement at seeing the product.
Contents
Abstract 3
Acknowledgements 4
Introduction: 7
Housing with Authority
. Architects and housing
- The Case: Sheikh Sarai and Vasant Kunj
- The Issues in Housing
- Introduction
. The Delhi Development Authority
History
Division of Labor
The Architectural Establishment
Staffing
Salaries
Research
The Architects
Education
. Private Architects and Housing
. The Middle Class
Range of Income
Salaried Group
Housing Requirements
. Conclusions
. Architectural Qualities
Site and Unit
e Design Process
Division of Labor
Salaries
Visibility
Staffing
Research
Conclusions
Authority housing process. They are a professional group with a strong interest
in the quality of life of the people who occupy their buildings, and yet
they are often vilified for producing dwellings which they would never
consider occupying themselves."i
2 Erve Chambers and Setha Low, eds., Housing, Culture and Design,
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1989), CulturalImportance
of Housing Design Policy by Jon Lang.
will be incorporated into public policies for housing design
with all their deficiencies and will be applied in contexts in
which they are not valid. What is more important to
understand is the set of variables that link house form and
environment.
"In private practice, with these results one would have to close
down, but civil service gives a protection." 3
The DDA
With respect to the Authority, the issues that were
raised dealt with:
Division of Labor: The DDA functioned through a
disaggregation of work, and by dividing the project into
various independent components. On the other hand, the
private architect's office employed consultants for structural
and services design, and the design was based on dialogue
between consultants and architects.
Background
5 Ibid
6 R.E. Frykenberg, Delhi Through the Ages, (New Delhi: Oxford
University Press, 1986), PunjabiRefugees and Greater Delhi, by V.N.
Dutta, pp. 166
up a single planning and controlling authority for the
development of the entire urban Delhi.7
7 Jain,Making of a Metropolis.
8 Master Plan of Delhi.
9 Breese, Urbanization.
10 Jain, Making of a Metropolis
[7] DDA: Master Plan for Delhi LAND USE PLAN
FOR 1981
01 2 3 4 sKU
Hierarchyand Structure
11 Ibid.
12 Ibid.
chairman of the Authority belongs to the Lt. Governor of
Delhi and, therefore, the Authority functions directly under
the Ministry of Works and Housing. The Lt. Governor of
Delhi is a nominee of the President of India. As a non-
elected post, he enjoys tremendous discretionary powers and
an autonomy of decision-making. The unique position of
the DDA, being independent of the Delhi Administration and
responsible directly to the Ministry of Housing, has vested
in it the powers of central government decision-making at the
city level. As an agency that controls development in the
city, it exercises great power, which also makes it vulnerable
to corruption and clientelistic practices.
Salaries
15 Ibid.
16
Romesh Thapar, "Space and Society
17 Ibid.
Quantitatively, the units provided were running a hopeless,
losing battle with demand. However, for those who were
fortunate enough to get one, these units gave a tremendous
financial and social security.
18 Breese, Urbanization
19 Culture and rituals vary greatly even within the country. Thus a
South Indian might have a very different requirement of the layout of
the house from someone from the eastern or northern parts.
20 Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of Independent India.
21 Peter Scriver and Vikram Bhatt, "Contemporary Indian
Architecture," Space and Society, (July-September, 1987), p. 119.
22 Ibid, p.119.
Indian architecture gave rise to discontent amongst the
architectural community. A number of architects started to
reexamine the existing town and villages in India. "A new
architecture of associations was being explored." 2 3
Architects such as Ranjit Sabhiki and Ajoy Choudhary of the
firm Design Group, began to make unusual moves in
reeducating their clients to appreciate the high densities and
congested, inward-looking spatial experience of traditional
dwelling. Both Kuldip Singh, another private architect in
Delhi, and the Design Group's efforts in this regard were
pioneering as developer-built housing for the middle income
was mainly in the form of independent units on the periphery
of the city. [9] Design Group:
YMCA Staff
Quarters, New Delhi, 1963-65
In 1963, the YMCA Staff Quarters designed by the
Design Group rejected the concept of the apartment house as
a monolithic slab, as popularized by Le Corbusier in the
Unit6 d'Habitation at Marseilles. The project aimed at
dealing with the climate by providing adequate cross-
ventilation, shaded internal courts, and a system of
alternating balconies protecting the major openings from the
outside. But above all, "it sought to create consciously an
environment evocative of narrow streets in older Indian cities with its
juxtaposition of terraces at different levels and its dramatic impact of
light and shade." 24
Drawing on traditional Indian morphological patterns
has since become a common feature in most architect- [b] First Floor Plan
designed housing schemes in the country. ".....a certain
catharsis was sought for the guilt of the advantaged over the fearful
disparities of the society."25
2 7 Peter
Serenyi, Techniques et Architecture.
by the architect developed seepages and had to be plastered
later.The importance of the Saket scheme lies in its massing
and linkage between blocks, which allowed a large number
of units to be incorporated. The Saket housing enabled
building larger blocks with clear demarcation between built-
up and open spaces. The key feature of this complex was the
careful articulation of spaces. DDA-designed housing
schemes had consisted of a linear massing of units with a
great deal of ambiguous open space that ends up being
neglected and run-down. The housing designed by the
Design Group and Kuldip Singh demonstrated a clear and
visible hierarchy of private and public open spaces.
The three sections in this chapter dealt with the
working of the DDA, the middle class population that it
builds the greatest percentage of its housing for, and the
trends in housing design in Delhi by both private architects
and DDA architects. I illustrated the functioning of the DDA,
and its existence as a bureaucratic public institution entrusted
with the role of development control in Delhi. I showed that
its functioning was based on the agenda that arose from the
nature of its position in the administration of the city rather
than the efficiency of functioning.
With respect to the middle class in Delhi, it was the
range of incomes, cultures, and growing political clout that
was important. Unable to meet the requirements of this
group within the constraints of economy, land, and time, the
DDA turned to a private architect for the first time in 1964 to
design a housing project - the Usha Niketan project. What
was different about the architects themselves and the manner
in which the services of the architects were procured that
could better address the requirements of middle income
housing? To answer this question, Chapters Two and Three
set out the differences in architectural quality of the two case
studies, Vasant Kunj and Sheikh Sarai, and then analyze the
process of their design.
2. A New Introduction
Resource:
The The involvement of private architects in DDA
Private housing created a different process and product in the DDA
Architect housing system. This chapter will examine one such project
to define the priorities of private architects and the
characteristics of housing designed for the DDA by them.
The project I will study for this purpose is a middle-to-upper
income housing project in an area of South Delhi known as
Sheikh Sarai. The consultant hired by the DDA for the
project was Raj Rewal, an architect well-known for his work
in India, though not as yet internationally renowned as he
would be on the domestic front. This chapter recounts the
procurement of his architectural skills, his dealings with the
DDA and the final project.
JM
[15] Shared space in Yamuna
housing complex
Unit Level
the design of the Usha Niketan housing scheme by the DDA. [23] Raj Rewal: Hall of States,
New Delhi 1982, a later project
Also in the sixties, he designed a pavilion for the Times of at Pragati maidan
India at Pragati Maidan, the main exhibition ground of New
Delhi where national and international fairs and other
activities were hosted. Pragati Maidan was a publicized
place that was always in the news regarding events held
there. The project, therefore attracted a great deal of
attention within the architectural circle and also within the
public realm.
Research
Design Review
Site Supervision
Background
Sector B
Division of labor
3 National
Capital Region Plan report, p.4.
independent while designing units." 4 The planning brief that was
prepared by the Planning and Urban Development Wing
specified the number, type, and size of units to be built and
did not leave the architects free to conclude that a certain mix
or type of development might be more or less desirable. The
architects role was to produce dwellings in response to a
planning brief, not to question that brief.
Salaries
Staffing
Design Review
5 A large, shady variety of tree, that has very attractive red flowers in
summer.
[31 Landscaping of yard by
resident
6 The Syntex tank is a moulded plastic tank used for storage of water
by individual units. The daily municipal water supply lasts a couple of
hours, during which time the tank gets filled and stores water to be used
in the remainder of the day.
7 Asok Mitra, Delhi - Capital City, (New Delhi: Thompson Press,
1970): 15.
The Residents
The DDA
Design incentives
5 Raj Rewal stated that apart from a refusal to relax building standards
for Sheik Sarai (FAR, ground coverage), the DDA were amenable to the
design proposals by the architect.
6 The DDA recently built another office block for itself. At present,
however, the new building deals exclusively with housing
administration such as allotment of units, registration lists, etc.
The division of labour
Salaries/ Compensation
Visibility of Projects
Access to Power
10
Nabeel Hamdi, Housing without Houses (New York: Van Nostrand
conflict regarding the identity of the client is the presence of
the public authority, the DDA. The DDA architect must defer
to his employer regardless of his views and stands on the
architecture of housing. He is constrained by his dependent
position to consider his employer's position before that of
his client, the nameless residents of DDA housing. In a
sense, the priorities of his superiors at the DDA - become his
own priorities.
Reinhold, 1990): 7.
11 The Papankalan project is a new city project undertaken by the DDA
for a population of 100,000 people.
12 Interview
by author with Professor Maitra, Professor of Housing at
SPA and the Housing consultant in the Papankalan team, January
1991.
The Architectural Establishment
Staffing
Cost of Failure
18
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the LCC, there were some marked similarities in the
functions and administration of both bodies. The LCC,
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