Skip to main content

Urban Renewal or Cities of Exclusion?

The urban renewal has impacted the landscape of many cities in India, where the marginalized have to starve for resources and the elite to enjoy resources in abundance. For past a year and a half Hazards Centre conducted research in Jaipur and Indore, in monitoring the shift in the informal sector workers in these cities. The research also underlines the transformation of these cities in terms of infrastructure development and investments. The two day seminar will have presentations by representatives from Jaipur, Indore, Patna, Lucknow and Delhi on the ongoing reform initiatives in their cities/states . It will also have short sectoral presentations on employment, urban basic services, so on followed by extensive discussions to strategise the kind of research and future action needed.

Dates: 15 February 2007 to 16 February 2007

Venue: New Delhi, India

For enquiries please contact: Leena hazardscentre@gmail.com +919811137421

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Architecture for the Poor - Hassan Fathy

Hassan Fathy was a remarkable man: artist, antiquarian and social reformer to the world's poor. He was slightly built and enveloped by an air of virtuousness, projecting the intellectual vigour, tranquillity and inner calm reserved for the elect. These qualities, accompanied by a twinkle in his eye and a willingness to listen, made him a favourite of students, who responded to him with warmth and humour, and vied for his attention. Fathy's architectural and social ideas were based at first upon his colonial education, and only later moulded by a deep knowledge of his country's long history and in particular its architecture, which had often been controlled by mathematics and mystical geometries. Six general principles guided him throughout his career: the primacy of human values in architecture; the importance of a universal approach; the use of appropriate technology; the need for socially oriented, co-operative construction techniques; the essential role of tradition; and

Low Cost Housing in Sri Lanka

Currently I am involved in a project, with Hidaya Foundation , for designing and constructing low-cost housing for the victims of the tsunami in the Indian Ocean. As a non-profit organization founded in 1999, Hidaya Foundation has undertaken a mission to implement educational, social welfare, and charitable projects in economically depressed areas of Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, USA and Canada. The project involves designing, training and construction of houses for widows and orphans in the regions affected by the disaster. The idea is not only to build structures, but to build communities that are self-sufficient and sustainable. The main principles will be: 1. Use of local materials 2. Use of local labor 3. Training of locals in sustainable building technologies 4. Constructing communities that the people living there can associate themselves with 5. Managing within a very low budget The idea is to involve dedicated and willing volunteers who will learn the technology and train the l