Rahul Mehrotra: The architectural wonder of impermanent cities
Rahul Mehrotra is an architect working in India who focuses on institutional buildings and conservation of historic places. He is also a professor at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
that are larger than five million people.
the story of one such city,
an ephemeral megacity.
for a Hindu religious festival
in smaller editions every four years,
the Yamuna rivers in India.
that during the festival,
of these two great rivers
is built to house them.
live there for the 55 days,
begin to recede
to 15th of January,
of a real megacity:
or if the river changes course,
which can be volatile.
as well as social, infrastructure.
that are used for security
like any real megacity would do.
are employed by the city.
a Mela Adhikari,
all works efficiently.
and the most efficient Indian city
in comparison to Manhattan,
or a pop-up city.
this is a state enterprise,
of neoliberalism and capitalism,
complete responsibility
intentional city, a formal city.
on the ground very lightly.
that are used to build this settlement
a fabric or plastic.
come together and aggregate.
from a small tent,
five or six people, or a family,
sometimes 1,000 people.
and this imagination of the city,
of the festival, within a week,
is offered back to the river,
the water swells again.
as a kit of parts
go to little villages in the hinterland,
are used in small towns,
these Hindu beliefs or not.
amount of energy and imagination
the ground lightly,
obsessed with permanence.
the only constant in our lives.
from these sorts of settlements?
for transaction,
this one in Mexico,
on the weekends, about 50,000 vendors,
creates new chemistries,
like parking lots, for example.
as an architect and a planner,
it's not static.
of temporary settlements.
the favelas of Latin America.
is becoming the new permanent.
during the Ganesh festival,
for dinners and celebration.
and plaster of Paris.
we call them maidans.
incredibly nuanced and complicated,
the cricket pitch --
is not touched, it's sacred ground.
and the wedding party
about these questions,
for temporary problems?
will be relevant in a decade?
that arises from this research.
shopping malls in North America,
that in the next decade,
capturing resources,
with massive resources,
get absorbed into the city.
nomadic structures, deflatable,
around the world or in those countries,
for the next Olympics?
like the circus,
that used to camp in cities,
with the static city.
become suddenly aware of each other,
of the ring with animals and performers.
people become aware of things,
climate change,
can we be more accommodating?
nature continuously
unsuccessfully?
our cities like a circus,
must be completely temporary.
in our imagination about cities,
our resources efficiently,
urban design cultures,
it might have on our lives.
my students and I studied,
where the city had been disassembled.
to be covered over by the water,
through our research
how much we had learned
the efficiency of the city,
that made the city.
for a few days."
architecture will come and go,
for us as citizens and architects.
is bigger than permanence
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Rahul Mehrotra - Architect, urbanistRahul Mehrotra is an architect working in India who focuses on institutional buildings and conservation of historic places. He is also a professor at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University.
Why you should listen
Rahul Mehrotra is an architect working from Mumbai and Boston, where he also teaches at Harvard University. His work covers a range of buildings, from houses to institutional to office buildings. A recent project was a housing estate for 100 elephants and their caretakers in Jaipur, India.
Mehrotra is passionate about writing. He's written several books on the history and architecture of Mumbai, including Architecture In India Since 1990. He's also written on urbanism in India and is currently working on a book on his experiences as a practitioner in India.
Rahul Mehrotra | Speaker | TED.com