Functional Retrofitting of Chaupars, Public Squares in the walled city of Jaipur
Singh, Raghu Pratap;
Kala, Nikhil
Abstract:
Human interaction is an essential act to achieve individual as well as collective prosperity. The act of human interaction is possible at varying spatial scales at city level. However, public squares have been one of the prominent sites of interaction for socio-cultural, economic and political purposes since the birth of cities. Selective advantage of connectivity makes public squares hotspots of interaction whether the square is organic or designed; enclosed or open; young or historically significant; and mono-functional or hybrid. Public squares in walled city of Jaipur were planned at intersection of four high capacity multi-functional roads surrounded by temples, religious ponds, markets, and associated activities. Walled city of Jaipur was designed during the time when squares were considered as part of public realm. Over time, vehicular traffic suppressed public space as a part of permanent infrastructure and town planning became a practice that facilitated commerce and associated traffic. A place once considered as an active part of public realm, now occupied by varying hybrid functions and became a challenge to philosophy of a square.
The hybrid nature of Squares in Jaipur is a result of many diverse activities occurring simultaneously. Vendors are using the roadside space for selling their goods, people coming in for shopping activities, tourist flow from other parts of the city, devotees crowding in at the temples, people waiting for the public transport, and gelling in with all this is the motorised vehicular traffic. These activities can be categorised as Socio-cultural, Economic and Physical connectivity for the purpose of this study.
In order to support these activities at public squares (Chaupars of Jaipur), the infrastructure around it plays a vital role. The shaded corridors in front of shops, the temple complex at the corners of squares, the shaded break outs provided by the trees for people to relax, the pedestrian space on roadside used by vendors, the heritage structures around, providing flexibility and supporting the diverse typology of trade occurring at these squares, and the famous monuments around these squares adding to the vibrancy and the cluster of patterns.
This research majorly focuses upon these diverse activities and the link between the activities and infrastructure around it. It goes through the detailed study of historical significance and purpose of these Chaupars and their transformation over the period of time through socio-cultural, economic and spatial lenses. And then identifying minimal design interventions in order to create edges amongst activities at Chaupar without compromising on its identity. Radically it is a Functional Retrofitting of Chaupar through minimal design changes.