Union territory
and capital of Punjab and Haryana, Chandigarh is a unique city
being only four decades old, its Nehruvian idealism is in stark
contrast with the modern generation, rapid industrial development
on the outskirts, a larger flow of tourists heading further
north, leading to a population perpetually on the move and the
mushrooming of hotels, restaurants and other in-transit
facilities. The tranquil and pollution-free environs, shorter
distances and the sharp contrasts between dull exteriors and
plush interiors are the delight of Chandigarh’s inhabitants. Even
though the Le Corbusier architecture tends to be a trifle
monotonous at times; the wide tree-lined boulevards and avenues,
easily defined localities nominated as ‘sectors’, a great amount
of greenery, the Rock Garden, lake and general sense of
organization all contribute towards making Chandigarh a charming
place to live in and visit.
The union
Territory of Chandigarh is the twin capital of the northern
states of Punjab and Haryana. Spread out over 114 sq. km. it has
a population of about a million. The principal languages of the
city are Hindi and Punjabi. It has big industrial undertakings as
well as more than 2,500 small-scale industrial units. One of the
few modern planned cities in India, Chandigarh is divided into 47
self-contained sectors.
The town derives
its name from Goddess Chandi Devi whose temple stands 15 km form
Chandigarh. There is a sense of purposeful designing in
Chandigarh with a rectilinear alignment of streets, the neat
geometrical design of residential quarters, reinforced concrete
structures and self-contained area layouts. At the heart of
Chandigar’s designing are sectors, each of them with its shops,
academic, and health care buildings, places of worship, open
spaces, a green belt and, of course, the residential areas. The
essential ingredient in each sector’s planning has been principal
day-to-day functions of living, working, care of body and spirit.
The initial plans
were drawn in New York by Albert Mayer and Mathew Novicki. When
the latter died in an air crash in 1950, the work was entrusted
to Le Corbusier, a well known architect and planner. The city’s
four major work areas are: the capital complex, consisting of the
Secretariat, Legislative Assembly and High Court, in the north
with the hills as a background dominating the city; Sector-17,
which is the city and district center, with administrative and
state government offices, shopping malls, banks and other
offices; in the west, a zone for undergraduate and postgraduate
education, among them the university, and institutions of
engineering, architecture, Asian studies and medicine and the
industrial area in the east.
In the city of
extravagant vision, it is not unusal to come across something
like a Rock Garden, which sounds farcical unless actually
visited. The result of the imagination and devoted labour of Nek
Chand the Rock Garden comprises several areas of sculptures
created from debris. Molded rock, waste coal and other
disposables have become immortal sculptures in the shape of man
and his environment. Fitting into this scenario are museums and
art galleries, a lake with water sport facilities and the largest
rose garden in Asia. The hill torrents skirting the city were
canalized to form a large lake with a most attractive boulevard,
along which the citizen take the morning and evening air and
watch waterfowl which have made Sukhna Lake a halting place on
their migration from central Asia to India and vice-versa.
Chandigarh’s
builders blessed it with a futuristic vision, but work here is
still not over. Phase two of the building of Chandigarh
continues, and the 21st century city may well, in
time, become one of the most modern and comfortable in Asia.
Here, in this almost ideal city, the new architectural technique
has found a sense of balance which is often missing when it
intrudes upon already existing, traditional symmetry. In the
years to come, city planners, architects, students of art and
visitors from around the globe will gather to see what man an
create out of a desert. The creation of Chandigarh is a
monumental triumph for India.