Noted
architect Anupama Kundoo makes buildings that do minimal damage to
the environment and uses local materials
Photos: Anupama Kundoo by Juan Rayos. The prototype of the dining room of 'The Wall House'. Photo by Andreas Deffner
By
Shevlin Sebastian
Anupama
Kundoo, with flowing black hair, and dressed in a black and white
blouse-skirt, walks elegantly towards the lectern at Thanima-2,
an international conference for architects which was held recently
at the National Institute of Technology, Calicut.
“Indians
are one-sixth of the world population, but we have only 2.4 per cent
of the world's land,” says Anupama. “This is a huge problem. The
number of people on the footpaths of Mumbai are much more than those
who live in multi-storeyed buildings. We are in denial of our social
segregation.”
The
internationally-reputed Anupama makes buildings that are low-cost,
have low environmental impact and is suited to the local
socio-economic conditions.
She
displayed an example of this at last year's architecture biennale at
Venice. Within a 2500 sq. ft. installation, she set up a 400
sq. ft. prototype of a low-cost house.
“The
house was hand-made,” says Anupama. “I took the help of artisans
from Tamil Nadu who made blocks made of ferrocement (a cheaper and
different type of concrete) at the Technical University of Berlin,
with the help of German engineers. Then they came to Venice and made
the walls and floors on the spot.”
Ferrocement
has many advantages. While reinforced concrete is 15 cms thick,
ferrocement, which is made of fine chicken mesh, is only 2 ½ cms.
“Thanks to the mesh, the tensile strength is evenly distributed,”
says Anupama. “So, it is more ductile than concrete and
earthquake-resistant.”
This
kind of house can be assembled in five to six days. So you save a
lot of money and time. And local masons can build these simple
components in their own backyards.
Meanwhile,
the trip had an impact on the artisans. “Because they spent time
in a heritage city like Venice, they realised that there was no need
to imitate anybody,” she says. “In fact, they felt proud of
their Indian heritage.”
And
so does Anupama, who passed out from the JJ College of Architecture,
Mumbai in 1989. Thereafter, for the next 12 years, she lived in
Auroville, Pondicherry, where she built several innovative
buildings. The most notable one was her own residence called 'The
Wall House'.
It
is L-shaped, with a courtyard in the middle and was built using
traditional achakal bricks and terracotta tubes. As a result, she
had reduced the use of concrete and steel. The dining table was made
from a single log of wood, while the bathroom has an open-to-sky
design. Incidentally, a life-size replica was shown at the 2012
Venice Biennale.
Apart
from her building projects, Anupama is an academician. Today, she
holds the chair of 'Affordable Habitat' at Universidad Camilo Jose
Cela, Madrid, and was the Strauch Visiting Critic at Cornell
University. Earlier, she had taught at Berlin, New York and
Queensland. And she urges her students, especially those from India,
to use local skilled and unskilled labour, along with the members of
the local community for their projects. “In this way, the impact on
the environment will be minimal,” says Anupama.
(Sunday
Magazine, The New Indian Express, South India and Delhi)
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