Achuyt Prakash Kanvinde 1916-2002 Life and works of Padma Shri Achyut Kanvinde occupied a unique position in the history of contemporary Indian architecture. He was an Indian architect , teacher, writer and a committed modernist as he always desired to take Indian architecture to be global and to the height of international style.
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Achuyt Prakash Kanvinde1916-2002
Life and works of
Padma Shri Achyut Kanvinde occupied a unique position
in the history of contemporary Indian architecture. He was
an Indian architect , teacher, writer and a committed
modernist as he always desired to take Indian architecture
to be global and to the height of international style.
Kanvinde was born in 1916 in
a small village on the Konkan
coast. Raised in a joint family
in the village.
Kanvinde had the calling of a
painter and did enroll in an
art school but the family
decided that architecture
would be a better profession
for him. He entered the
Architecture Department at
Sir J.J. School of Art in 1935
then headed by Claude
Batley. In 1943, he joined the
newly formed Council for
Scientific and Industrial
Research as architect.
Achyut Kanvinde attended
Harvard Graduate school of
Design in 1945. In ‘47
appointed as the Chief
Architect of CSIR (the council
for Scientific and Industrial
Research).
He return to India in 1948 and worked on the
planning and design of several laboratories.
Formed Kanvinde and Rai in 1955.
He practiced perfectly for 55 years, he was
considered the pioneer of what may be
termed the modern movement in architecture
in India.
• Kanvinde plays with space and forms.
His designs are slender, balanced,
proportionate, neat and well crafted.
His Concepts and Philosophy
• He gave much more importance to the
natural light. He gave such a form to the
building that it can solve the problem of
ventilation as well as excessive heat .
• He believed that a grid of
columns forming a matrix
giving structural and spatial
aspect would turn a design to
more sophisticated and
faceted.
• He treated his building with
Vastushastra.
• Functionalist style of design
• logic of lightness
The complete focus on the
materials to be used in
construction kanvinde always try
to develop such an aesthetic
for a heavy mass construction
that looks light.
The institutional buildings he designed in the first five years, are conservative. All having:• similar facades.• Horizontal, clean volumes, • aesthetically pleasing proportions of
fenestration.• Ribbon windows.• A grid frame structure- unexposed, and
plastered exterior finish.
Followed by an experimental phase- in the course of the next five years he designed: (i)Harivallabdas House (ii) IIT Kanpur (iii) Doodhsagar Dairy
Each appears to be an exploration in a distinctly newdirection. The Harivallabdas House has been taken up indetail later on. The Doodhsagar dairy is monstrous, raw, andprobably one of the first outbursts of what can be calledKanvinde’s brutalism. The form is very rough, and blocky. Hehas always been described to be modest and approachable,and always has preferred to keep a low profile. This buildingpresents a stark contrast to his character.
His works
Nehru Science center, Mumbai
ISKCON Temple, New Delhi
IIT, New Delhi
IIT, Kanpur
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
IIT-Kanpur is located on the Grand Trunk Road, 15 km
west of Kanpur City and measures close to 420hectares.
Halls of residence, faculty and staff houses and
community buildings surround the central academic
area to provide flexibility in movement andcommunication.
The sprawling campus is spread over an area of 4.3km².
The Institute has a number of facilities , including the
National Wind Tunnel Facility.
• Elevated pedestrian walkway
• Sheltered and yet openness
• Protection from hot sun yet
allowing breezes
• Reveals the internal functions
in a building as separate
masses.
• Arranged in ways that were
functional from inside and
legant from outside.
Indian Institute of Technology
New Delhi
• It is established in 1961.
•“Nehru University” is adjoining at the southern edge.
• The site is available near “Qutab Minar Complex” which is a
landmark place in the colorful history of Delhi.
• The Institute campus is about 19 Km. away from the Delhi Main
Railway Station, 14 Km. from the New Delhi Railway Station, 21
Km. from the Inter-State Bus Terminal and 10 Km from Delhi
Airport.
• It is well connected to the major city centers by open and wide
roads.
Aerial view Hostel building
The site being longitudinal in shape, two academiczones have been located mid-way between the tworesidential zones in order to reduce walking distance.• The main academic building accommodates variousteaching and research activities.• Heavy engineering laboratories are placed
on the ground floor, light laboratories on the first floor.
Computer science blockMechanical blockMain Building
ISKCON TempleNew Delhi
•It is built in 1998 and it islocated in New Delhi.• The project is situated on asloping site and covers an areaof 3 acres with the slope of 8meters in relation to roadlevel.• Deity spaces are located atthe highest level.• It has assembly hall for 400people.• The building was constructedof reinforced concrete framestructure and clad with redand white stone finish.
•Services spaces like kitchen, dinning areas for
devotees, offices are located at the lower level.
• Other activities are :-
•Multimedia cultural center.
•Auditorium.
•Animistic presentation museum.
•Dormitory for devotees.
•Small shopping areas.
•Restaurant and offices.• Temple is around an informal court with sunk garden
spaces.
•There are cascades all around and waterfalls to
create ambience.
Nehru Science centerMumbai
Nehru Science Centre is Situated on Dr. E. Moses Road, Mumbai
-400018, in between Worli Naka and Mahalaxmi Railway Station
and spread over 14 acres of land.
The Centre provides a natural and free environment for
students to learn, familiarize and spend creative holidays and
for professionals in the field of science education to have a
glimpse of innovations in science education.
Close to 1,20,000 school children alone participate in the
activities of the Centre.Nehru Science Centre, the largest Science Centre in the
country has a sprawling 8 acres of science park with varieties of
plants, trees and shrubs .
More than 50 hands-on and interactive science exhibits on
energy, sound, kinematics, mechanics , transport, etc . are
installed in the science park.
The NSC building with its unique architecture houses severalpermanent science expositions on various themes.
The complex is worked out of a series of repetitive
multidimensional modules, creating a variation of spaces with
the building in a way that the units do not create monotony of
space, but a quality that creates surprises and stirs the minds of
visitors as the move with the complex .
Visitors approaching the museum enter at the second storey
atrium through a landscaped approach.
From there they can take a route and visit the exhibit areas bynegotiating one floor. At the lowest level, where the lecture
hall, the library and the cafeteria area are located for leisure,
half way through the movement from where the visitors can
return back to the entrance atrium area after completing the