Heritage Buildings
Prince of Wales Museum
In
the early years of the twentieth century, some prominent citizens
of Bombay decided to set up a Museum with the help of the
government to commemorate the visit of the Prince of Wales. The
committee spared no effort to realize this dream. On March 1,
1907, the then government of Bombay handed over to the museum
committee a spot of land known as the, 'Crescent Site'. Round
the corner of the Bombay Yacht Club, now taken over by the
Indian Atomic Energy Commission, stands the Prince of
Wales Museum. The foundation was laid by the future George
V, on his Indian visit of 1905. The Prince of Wales Museum is
a vast complex of buildings, given character and cohesion by a monumental
tiled concrete dome, all finished in blue basalt and yellow sandstone
from Kurla and set in gardens where the light throws arabesques
onto the textured coloured stone. Designed by George Wittet,
the foundation stone was laid in 1905 by the visiting Prince
of Wales. Built in 1914, the Museum has an Art section besides
Archaeological and Natural History sections. Paintings of Ajanta,
Ellora and other historical places are also on view here. The
building was converted to a military hospital during World War
I and finally opened in 1923 by Lady Lloyd, the wife
of Sir George Lloyd, the then Governor.
University Hall & Library with Rajabai Tower
One of the most outstanding landmarks of Mumbai. The famous
banker and merchant of the nineteenth century,
the late Seth Premchand Raichand as a memorial, built
the Tower to his beloved mother Rajabai. Designed
by Sir Gilbert Scott, it is a mixture of Gothic and
early ornamental French style. The Tower is 260 feet high.
Standing between the Secretariat and the Law Courts are
the most distinguished of Gothic Revival buildings. Sir George Gilbert
Scott, one of the most gifted architects of the 19th century was
the architect of the hisorical structure. Scott's adaptation of
the Italian Gothic style revels in the freedom to design an authentic
style, unhindered by the concessions to the climate which were necessary
in England. The result is one of his finest, yet one of his
least known works -- a building perfectly related to the climate:
cool, efficient and highly functional. The University Hall
was funded by Sir Cowasjee Jehangir Readymoney, and is designed
in the early French style of the 15th century with an ecclesiastical
air about it. The south end is separated from the main body of the
Hall by a grand arch. The highlight of the University is the Library
and the Clock Tower, completed in 1878. Though Scott
never visited India, he was able to indulge his knowledge and love
of Italian and French Gothic, to a great extent. Around the octagonal
crown stand sculpted figures representing the castes of Western
India and above these are another set of figures, all modelled by
the then assistant engineer, Rao Bahadur Makund Ramachandra.
Although the location and figures may be Indian, the inspiration
is Italian.
Bombay Municipal Buildings
The foundation stone for the offices of the Bombay Municipal
Corporation
was laid on December 9, 1884, by the Viceroy, Lord
Ripon. The Gothic design by F W Stevens was selected
over the Indo-Saracenic design submitted by R F Chisholm.
Completed in 1893, the building has a 255 feet tall tower, has
a vast office complex standing at the apex of two roads opposite
the Terminus.The structure remains unsurpassed in British India
for sheer ebullience. The winged figure crowning the central gable
is Urbs Prima in Indis, a personification of the most important
city in India. Adapted to the climatic extremes of Mumbai, The Gothic
architechture found its resolution in controlled composition. The
window arches are cusped, the corner towers elaborately domed. The
vast domed staircase tower triumphantly proclaims the then British
supremacy to the world at the zenith of the Empire.
Taj Mahal Hotel
The Taj Mahal Hotel was built in 1903, adjacent to
the Bombay
Yacht Club and its inception was due to Jamshedji Nusserwanji
Tata, one of the wealthiest Parsees in the city, a man
of enormous power and influence with diverse interests in iron and
steel, hydro-electricity, shipping and banking. The hotel, designed
by W Chambers, who worked for a local practice, was one of
the great hotels of the British Empire. It is located on a magnificent
site, facing out over the Arabian Sea, at that time to greet
new arrivals as they steamed in on the great liners. The building
is reputed to have many allusions to Gujarati architecture, but
really is an eclectic mixture calculated to whet the curiosity of
the visitor. It is predictably symmetrical, and over its centre
rises a huge red dome crowned by a belvedere (a small room on the
roof of a house). Each corner boasts a domed circular tower. The
second-to-fourth floors have six projecting canopied balconies and
the ground floor has a cool arcade.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus
Popularly known as Bori Bunder, and previously also called
as
a Victoria Terminus (VT), a new terminus for the Great
Indian Peninsula Railway, at the time the largest and most extensive
architectural work in India. This massive Italian Gothic style building
was built in 1888. It is one of the biggest railway terminus of
the East. It is the terminus or last stop or the starting of the
Central Railway (CR) trains. Nearby this you will find a
buildings of Brihan Mumbai Municipal Corporation, General Post
Office (GPO), Times of India etc. The Victoria Terminus station
is the finest example of Victorian Gothic architecture in
India. It was inspired by Sir George Gilbert Scott St. Pancras
Station in London, and was erected between 1878 and 1887. It
is highly original though rooted firmly in the tradition of Scott,
Ruskin, and Burges. The building epitomises the spirit of the
age and it stands as a paen of praise to the railway, which more
than any other factor was a catalyst in the rise of Mumbai. The
Terminus is a symmetrical building and is surmounted by a colossal
masonry dome. Beneath the dome, the stairs rise in solemn sweeps
to each floor. The booking hall is spanned by pointed arches with
wooden vaulted ceilings, decorated with stars on an azure background.
The lower part of the wall is clad in glazed tiles of rich foliated
designs. The windows are filled with stained glass or ornamental
wrought iron grille-work, to reduce the sun's glare. The whole Terminus
cost a wondrous 250,000 pounds. In the corridor at the entrance
leading to the main hall, the vaulting has richly carved animals.
The enormous 14-foot high statue of Progress crowning the dome is
the work of Thomas Earp, as are the richly carved stone medallions
which adorn the front elevation. Victoria Terminus, now called Chhatrapati
Shivaji Terminus, is a sensation in architecture, both in perspective
and in detail.
Horniman Circle and the Town Hall
What is now known as Horniman Circle was once called the
Elphinstone Circle. Charles Forjett, who was the municipal
commissioner of Mumbai in the 1860s, was responsible for turning
the central part of the old Green into Elphinstone Circle (Horniman
Circle), making an elegant hub for an otherwise unplanned Fort,
and retaining Mumbai's oldest open space. This the first example
in the city of civic planning on a grand scale, to a scheme conceived
by the then governor, Frere's predecessor Sir George Clerk.
Horniman Circle bears eloquent testimony to the ideals of the new
administration. Planned around the focus of the Town Hall and it's
classical architecture, it comprises a circle, with central gardens
surrounded by ornamental iron railings imported from England. The
Town Hall today houses the Asiatic Society. It was commenced in
1820, but it took over fifteen years to complete. It cost over 60,000
pounds. The building was designed by Colonel Thomas Cowper, Bombay
engineer, and completed after his death in 1825 by various others,
but principally by Charles Waddington. It is the finest neo-classical
building in India, with several unique adaptations to the climate.
The façade is a massive composition in a Greek Doric order.
The most beautiful of the structure are the Doric columns, which
were made in England. The interior of the building was completed
by Waddington. On the ground floor, he installed four splendid Ionic
columns copied from a Greek Temple. Elsewhere in the building is
some excellent statuary with figures of Elphinstone, Forbes and
Malcolm, all by Chantrey.
Arthur Crawford Market
Named after its founder Arthur Crawford, is Mumbai's largest
and best-organised marketing centre. Here you get anything from
flowers and fruits to fowl and fish. It is now renamed after the
Social Worker Mahatma Jyotiba Phule. Arthur Crawford, the
Crawford Market is at the northern end of the old British part
of the town, and faces the crowded inner city. An elegant covered
market, it dominates the skyline with its clock tower and steeple.
The cavernous spaces inside are divided into sections for fruits,
vegetables and meat. The building, completed in 1869, was donated
to the city by Cowasji Jehangir. The friezes on the outside
walls and the stone fountains inside were designed by Lockwood
Kipling. It was the main wholesale market for fruits in Bombay
until March 1996, when the wholesale traders were relocated to New
Bombay. Arthur Crawford Markets, brought to fruition by the
municipal commissioner of the same name, at the cost of 160,000
pounds. The building is supposedly 12th century Gothic and is supposed
to have the echoes of the stables of William Burges. The
Arthur Crawford Market stands on a corner site, and like an English
country market building, has a prominent clock tower, crowned by
a cupola, with a gable to each frontage and open galleries, now
infilled. The main entrance is through three semi-circular arches,
above which are bas-reliefs by John Lockwood Kipling, depicting
the imperial ideal of strong-limbed peasants under a 'beneficent'
imperial sun. Inside the market lies a drinking fountain designed
by Emerson, and executed by Kipling. Today, it is overwhelmed by
stalls. Crawford Market still comfortably houses huge meat, vegetable
and fish markets.
Gateway of India
Apollo Pier is called the Gateway of India. It was
built in the
memory of the late King George V and Queen Mary to
commensurate their visit in December 1911. It is one of the
favourite evening resorts. Statues of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj
and Swami Vivekanand have been installed just opposite the
Gateway of India. George Wittet, consulting architect to the city
of Bombay, was the designer of the last great building of the British
rule in Bombay, the Gateway of India. It was intended as a triumphal
arch to commemorate the visit of George V and Queen Mary in 1911,
en route to the Delhi Durbar. The arch of the Gateway was actually
a part of a much wider scheme which Wittet intended for the area,
but it never came to fruition. As a result, it today looks a little
isolated and unaligned with the axis of the former Yacht Club.
These architectural imperfections are lost on the casual visitor
and are visible only to the discerning eye. Historically, the Gateway
of India remains the spot where almost 300 years of colonialism
ended and where the last British troops departed from, a slow setting
of the sun over the British Empire.
By : Sharmistha Chakraborty
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