// you’re reading...

Cities

Freedom Park in Bangalore Set to Open in November

A vital green space to beat the city centre rush, topped with a slice of history. On offer is a unique experience, as the BBMP gets ready to open the long-in-the-wait Freedom Park to the public in November, this year.

The 20-acre park, coming up in the former central prison premises on Seshadri Road, has had a long drawn record, ever since plans for the park were finalized as early as in 2002. According to the BBMP officials, delays in awarding contracts have been a key reason for the slackened pace of progress. With the run-up to the launch gathering steam, it’s time to look ahead.

It’s business as usual at the construction site. Labourers are busy completing the landscaping works, as work on reviving the prison barracks is also on. The basic structure of the 150-seater amphitheatre is in place, along with the auditorium.

A K Gopalaswamy, engineer-in-chief, BBMP, told The Times Of India that 80% of the construction work has been completed. "About 10 acres of the park will be covered under landscaping. The barracks and the hospital blocks are being retained as heritage structures,” he said. The central tower and the prison’s entrance block are the other structures that have found their way into the park. The park has been categorized under six broad areas: general, museums and exhibitions, contemporary art, retail, performance spaces and water features.

The Freedom Park is coming up on a budget of Rs 10.27 crore and will also have six acres of land as a dedicated space to hold protests and rallies. This space, on the lines of Hyde Park in London, has been proposed as a solution to the traffic concerns that protests and rallies in the city centre trigger. Gopalaswamy said the BBMP was in the process of deciding on outsourcing an agency for maintenance of the park.

DESIGNERS SPEAK

The design to convert the prison into an urban park was awarded to Soumitro Ghosh and Nisha Mathew-Ghosh of the Mathew and Ghosh Architects Pvt Ltd after they emerged winners in a nation-wide contest, in 2003. The competition was initiated by the BBMP with the support of the erstwhile Bangalore Agenda Task Force (BATF). The design has won international awards, including the Cityscape and Architectural Review Awards (2007) in Dubai.

The vision behind the design is to recover the depleting green cover and urban lung spaces in a densely developing area and give back the "void’ ‘ to the city, according to the two architects.

What followed is the model of a multi-use urban park that offers state-of-the-art information, cultural and leisure joints, children’s play areas, light and sound shows and more.

ALL-IN-ONE

Joggers/walkers track (3,000 sq m), children’s play area (5,200 sq m), jail museum, information corridor gallery, book museum, children’s interactive museum in the old cells yard, tree museum – outdoor exhibition park, Freedom Wall stretch of the old jail with permanent multimedia art, sculpture court, pathways junctions, designer souvenir shops, book shop, traditional craft stalls, 150-seater amphitheatre, 50-seater enclosed theatre space, open plaza for gathering, water pool at main entrance and natural localized water percolation zones visible only in rainy seasons.

Original article here.





Related Posts

No related posts

Discussion

No comments for “Freedom Park in Bangalore Set to Open in November”

Post a comment






RSS Elsewhere in India

  • Shout Out > Poonchh by Aarohi
    Aarohi Singh is putting her art where her heart has always been. Poonchh is a collection of products created in aid of stray dogs. It will be showcased at 100Ft restaurant, Indiranagar, Bangalore on the 10, 11 and 12 February 2012. A great way for those who feel for the cause to show their support […]
  • Caught my eye > Chai Paani, Naqqashi Platter, Kaagazi, Junk Mirror, Recycled Paper Jewellery
    Chai Paani money bank. Fitting considering the political climate. Available at Store ABD, Whitefield – Banaglore, U store, Delhi and Mumbai and online at Shopo Gourd Platter made with Naqqashi (engraving) By Tejas Soni – tejassonidesign(at)gmail(dot)com A proper Paper Bag by Kaagazi. More here. Junkyard Mirror. Help recycle some junk. Available at Plush Plaz […]
  • Book Review > Pattern and Ornament in the Arts of India
    As visitors to grand Palaces, Temples, Mosques and Tombs, we are likely to come away more with awe than with a picture of what we have really seen. Often, details merge with a memory of the whole. Until someone points out the complexities and captures them so we can study how the place came to […]
  • Caught My Eye > Aarti Verma, SAS Home, Maati, Raja Gondkar
    Aarti Verma of Art Meets Fashion. Hand-painted by Aarti, bags made by Karigars. I liked these three from her hand-painted work. More of it here – Blog and facebook. A beautiful rust Nandi silk table runner by SAS Home available on sale online at Heaven and Home. Could probably also use it to dress up […]
  • Fashion Feature> SLOW. useless.
    Today, our fingers and hands do more of this – typing words onto screens, hailing taxis, raising toasts, holding files, carrying shopping bags – and less of this – folding paper to make planes, digging through mud to sow a seed, sewing a button, threading a needle to darn a tear. The process of making […]

RSS South Asia

  • Conference + Symposium 09.09
    Le Corbusier: "Freeing the round has become false. Occupying the ground in the Military sense of the term has been the sole true action..." - This foreclosure of the ground is precisely the death of the formative model. It is urgent to invent a conceptual and programmatic model that is independent and functions outside the exhausted institutional f […]
  • Report on Rationalization of Procedures
    The Committee deliberated upon the procedures for grant of building plan approvals and completion certificates including the role of the Delhi Urban Arts Commission therein. The consensus of the opinion was that the present procedures involving a multiplicity of authorities were resulting in considerable harassment and delays. The present procedures of scrut […]
  • Panel Discussion: Architecture and the City
    In late July of 2005, I was invited by Inside Outside magazine to participate in their expo in Bangalore. The idea was to give young architects like me a chance to get noticed. I took the stall, but instead of designing and building the perfect bedroom, I set it up with a TV, two speakers and an amp and screened a film. It was odd, to put it mildly. Many peo […]
  • Introduction to Whitewash!
    India, love it or hate it. Certainly it is impossible to be unaffected by it. My own relationship with the place is tainted by the contempt I feel for the people and incidents that unmake it everyday. Whitewash is merely a reflection of the skewed impressions that present-day personalities and events have made on my life. The deafening roar of the street, th […]
  • Sataire: Architect wanted
    Architect wanted with cool exterior, and studied manner required by established company. Part teacher, part practitioner, part writer, candidate may be a kind of new age Leonardo dabbling in disciplines for which he has neither training nor skill. When there is no work in the office candidate should be willing to write a manifesto or two; when there is nothi […]
  • Whitewash! An Unkind View of India and its Makers
    A tabloid with a difference, Whitewash is a disturbingly indiscreet piece of writing that rips apart conventional Indian notions of politics, equality, caste, gender, ownership, personal rights, heritage, love of country - all in a way that at once distresses and invigorates […]
  • Whitewash! New Delhi Excavated
    It happened just like Mount Vesuvius. A little after mid-day on August 24, 2016 AD disaster struck. Mount Simla on the northern fringes of New Delhi erupted and literally buried the city in a layer of ash. First to be buried were small towns like Panipat and Karnal - towns whose loss could easily be sustained by the national budget; then the suburbs of Model […]
  • Whitewash! "Old Cars Never Die"
    In 1970, Automotive Digest published a picture of the Ambassador car with the heading Old Cars Never Die, they only move to India. The golden anniversary of the Ambassador was celebrated a decade before the golden anniversary of India, and to applaud the union of the two giants, Random House recently released the definitive biography of the car called Ambass […]
  • The Alternatives
    In India, historically, the architect has been used as an anonymous means to an end. In the past, the end was generally the glorification of the State for religion through the creation of plastic forms and visual drama. Today, though not so anonymous, architects are ready accomplices to the property speculators, who either want to make money or glorify thems […]
  • Professional Ideolgy
    Let me put the question differently, with the intention of answering it. What could motivate an Indian to seek advice from an architect? I believe it would be the requirement for a durable shelter which takes care of his needs, which are not only biological–at a certain level they are universal–but also culture-specific needs, subsuming values, attitudes and […]

A Wadias.Inc Enterprise