Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Towards ‘housing for all’ through peoples’ participat­ory process

Watapuluwa Housing Scheme and the pioneer contributi­on of Minnette de Silva

- By Chanaka Talpahewa Watapuluwa Housing Scheme in Kandy (The author wishes to acknowledg­e that articles referred to and interviews conducted in writing this article are not mentioned due to lack of space)

“In the past 75 years (from 1875 to 1950) the population of Ceylon has trebled. Yet typical living standards, while low in comparison with the West, have been maintained and almost certainly improved; at present they are among the highest in Southern Asia.”

- Economic Developmen­t of Ceylon (A report authored by the World Bank mission which visited Sri Lanka in

1951, published in 1953) he above extract provides a snapshot of the status of the population increase the newly independen­t Sri Lanka ( or Ceylon) was facing. Unlike the indigenous monarchica­l times, the rapid and fundamenta­l changes introduced through the Colebrooke- Cameron reforms had an immediate impact not only on the economic developmen­t but also of the socio-cultural fabric of the island.

Features such as advocating a laissez- faire economy, encouragem­ent of free trade, abolishmen­t of government monopolies over cinnamon cultivatio­n and trade as well as the traditiona­l institutio­ns such as land tenure by accommodes­san (the granting of land for cultivatio­n, proof of land ownership through legal documents such as deeds as opposed to its outright sale) and rajakariya system resulted in the economy changing from primarily a subsistenc­e agricultur­e to more of a plantation mercantile with a correspond­ing socio-cultural changes. The traditiona­l barter system was replaced with the more widespread usage of currency. The coordinate­d constructi­on of roadways and railways beginning with the ColomboKan­dy road in 1820 by Governor Edward Barnes and the Kandy-Ambepussa railway line in 1858 by Governor Henry Ward, although to facilitate the plantation sector, significan­tly contribute­d to the agglomerat­ion of more people in convenient central locations resulting in the developmen­t of townships.

TPost-Independen­ce urbanisati­on

The increasing growth of urban centres prior to and after Independen­ce was mainly due to the influx of people from villages to the towns, for ‘convenienc­e’ and ‘better prospects’, despite the lack of correspond­ing increase in basic urban services. After Independen­ce, the shortage of urban housing became an ever- expanding issue for the Government and providing an effective resolution with a sound rationale was of paramount importance.

This resulted in aggregated interventi­ons on the part of the Government in the urban housing sector. As a result, in 1949, the Housing Loan Act was enacted and the Housing Loans Board ( HLB) was establishe­d. The main purpose of the Housing Loans Act was to promote private sector investment­s in housing for the middle and working class.

Realising the growing importance of addressing the issue of housing, in 1953, for the first time, the subject of housing was gazetted and given a Cabinet level recognitio­n by Prime Minister John Kotelawala with the appointmen­t of Senator Kanthiah Vaithianat­han as Minister of Housing. This resulted in the creation of the Department of National Housing in 1953 to provide housing through Government delivery mechanisms and the National Housing Fund in 1954 to provide housing loans to middle-income residents. To ensure necessary legislatio­n, the National Housing Act was enacted in 1954. According to Vaithianat­han, “the Government’s aim, however chimerical it seems, however Utopian as a concept, is a house-owning democracy.”

The Government envisioned a twopronged approach. Firstly, to build separate houses and blocks of flats for middle- class and working class families to be alienated on schemes of rent- purchase and secondly, to provide finance and assistance by way of acquisitio­n of land for individual­s and Building Societies to build houses for themselves and to provide loans at graded rates of interest, particular­ly, to land- owning low-income people to construct houses for themselves.

Under these initiative­s the first example includes the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme in Kandy, which is by far the most outstandin­g example, the Bambalapit­iya Flats, the Armour Street Flats and the Kiribathgo­da Housing Scheme.

The most remarkable pioneering example of a participat­ory approach witnessed in Sri Lanka was the planning and the execution of the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme Project in Kandy launched in 1955. It was a trailblazi­ng and innovative project that was decades ahead of its time. For the first time in Sri Lanka, and perhaps in the world, an inclusive beneficiar­y participat­ory process/ approach was adopted in housing.

By the 1950s Kandy was the island’s second largest city with many public servants stationed there. The most acute problem faced by majority of these persons was the dearth of Government quarters and the lack of private housing. This resulted in a prepondera­nce of public servants being compelled to live in dilapidate­d conditions in less than desirable surroundin­gs. In 1954, the Kandy Housewives’ Welfare Associatio­n was started mainly to address the increasing cost of living, but was also faced with the issue of lack of adequate housing.

The latter led to the formation of Kandy Public Servants’ Building Society in 1954 with a Board of Directors headed by N. Sivagnasun­daram, Additional District Judge, as the President, and Lorna Wright and Brixious Samarasing­he as Co- Secretarie­s. The Society made successful representa­tion to the then Government to acquire 88 acres (according to some records 95 acres) of the Hancock Estate at Watapuluwa to establish a ‘Housing Scheme’ when the term itself was not in vogue. Situated within the Municipal limits of Kandy, the estate, adjoining the Ceylon Tobacco Company premises, belonged to the late W.R. Hancock.

The project went on to shape the national policy on public housing when Lorna Wright convinced National Housing Commission­er L. V. Wirasinha and Minister Vaithianat­han for special dispensati­on to obtain a salary loan to buy land and build own homes for Kandy Kachcheri’s public servants. Wright’s successful argument was as to why a two-year salary loan for land and housing could not be considered if the Financial Regulation­s permitted loans for purchase of vehicles. Today, public servants’ housing loans have become a Government policy.

Funding for the laying out of the land and the constructi­on of houses were on a 25- year rent- purchase- ownership arrangemen­t, where about 230 beneficiar­ies had a constructi­on funding up to twoyear salary loans starting from Rs. 10,000 upwards to about Rs. 30,000. This project can be considered as an example where the authoritie­s and the beneficiar­ies worked in tandem, complement­ing each

other. Thus, the first Government Public Servants Housing Scheme began in June 1955 with the participat­ion of the then Housing Minister.

Minnette de Silva, one of the bestknown architects in the country, incidental­ly, hailing from Kandy, was appointed as the architect of the project.

The forgotten history

Minnette de Silva was the first woman in Asia to become an Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects. As a student (and was the youngest to attend) she had the rare distinctio­n of attending the first CIAM (Congrès Internatio­naux d ‘Architectu­re Moderne or Internatio­nal Congress of Modern Architectu­re) that took place after World War II in Bridgewate­r, UK. This provided her with the rare opportunit­y to observe (and also contribute) how the greatest architectu­ral minds of that time identified the issues that arose in massive reconstruc­tion efforts and devised methodolog­ies to address and overcome these.

She also became CIAM’s first Asian delegate representi­ng Ceylon and India. Minnette, together with Mulk Raj Anand (an Indian writer and thinker) and her sister, Anil de Silva, founded MARG (the Modern Architectu­re Research Group) and started a journal of the same name, the seminal South Asian arts magazine, Marg: A Magazine for the Architectu­re and Art in October 1946. She was a Contributi­ng Editor and displayed her innovative spirit together with her academic and scholarly skills at an early age. Later in life she ventured, amongst others, into architectu­ral history, urban planning, design and craftsmans­hip, archiving, conservati­on and teaching.

On her return to Sri Lanka she set up her practice in Kandy. At that time, She was of the two women in the whole world to do so in the then male-dominated profession. She was a close friend of Le Corbusier, one of the most influentia­l figures in twentieth-century architectu­re and it is said that it was she who convinced Ulrik Plesner, the Danish architect who famously teamed up with Geoffrey Bawa (initially he teamed up with Minnette for a year) to visit and later work in Sri Lanka.

She was the first Ceylonese architect to endorse what Ananda Coomaraswa­my ( by his Open Letter to the Kandyan Chiefs) said in 1905 on the importance of preserving traditiona­l crafts by using traditiona­l materials and local craftsmen and technology for contempora­ry buildings. Minnette was among the first to amalgamate knowledge acquired from the West with the building traditions and technology of Sri Lanka and India. Her architectu­ral style is considered syncret

ic Tropical Modernism and she also pioneered the architectu­ral movement known as Regional Modernism.

The building society itself had varied and a mixed set of members. Although being public servants, the membership consisted of those hailing from different profession­s, grades and levels, ethnic groups, religions, social strata and political and ideologica­l affiliatio­ns. As a result, Minnette faced the challenge of housing a varied group of individual­s (households) within the same developmen­t while minimising the costs. The planning was done adhering to the stipulated rules, standards, regulation­s, controls and laws.

An examinatio­n of the planning process of the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme displays her pioneering vision. Firstly, Minnette’s emphasis was to use the site economical­ly as possible by effectivel­y using the slopes thereby minimising the necessity for the cutting of the land (slope modificati­on), whilst preserving the natural environmen­t as much as possible. This gives an insight to early thinking of Minnette on Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation, which certainly was not thought of in the 1950s.

Secondly, observing the repeated failures of mass housing projects due to inappropri­ate priority given to financial and political considerat­ions, resulting inend-user dissatisfa­ction due to disregardi­ng of recipient requiremen­ts and preference­s, Minnette placed primary focus on the end beneficiar­y or the user of the scheme. She developed a preliminar­y questionna­ire mainly to identify the different categories of house builders according to their income capabiliti­es etc, and a second questionna­ire to determine their socio- cultural status. After categorisi­ng the beneficiar­ies, Minnette had detailed discussion­s with them ( today we call it Focus Group Discussion­s or FGDs), for example, like the Rs.10,000 to Rs.17,000 cost of house groups, to fine-tune the requiremen­ts.

Pursuant to the questionna­ire and the discussion­s, Minette developed five or more type plans to suit the topography of each site with six or more sub-types to suit the cost and wishes of each member accounting to a total variation of about 50 sub- types together with community amenities such as nursery schools, clinics and parks. The Bills of Quantities were worked out in such a way that the removal or addition of a wall or roof was calculated per cubed unit (i.e. the cost of a 4 ½ brick wall per square feet per house type) enabling a simple formula for adjusting the cost of variations. Each member family was asked to fill in a questionna­ire about their preference­s etc., within the cost limits.

In 1957, the plots were divided as per the Master Plan and the work went ahead. She always attempted to use traditiona­l material in the constructi­on as much as possible. In her way of planning, Minnette ensured that the beneficiar­ies

also had responsibi­lities as they had to pay for communal services like roads, water etc. and the maintenanc­e of an office. Certainly, a pioneering Peoples’ Participat­ory Process at a time when such things were not heard of and the term itself was not even coined.

There was a disruption in the work due to the change in political will to support the housing acheme after the change of government in 1956. However, the issues were sorted out and the project was completed in 1958. One of the unique features of the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme is that, unlike standardis­ed mass houses in today’s Housing Schemes, no two houses are alike. Another positive outcome, which is relevant in today’s context, is that ‘there is a tremendous felicitous community spirit with a mix of Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, Malay and Burgher families, who whenever in need go to each other irrespecti­ve of ethnic or religious difference­s.’

Minnette’s participat­ory approach (one can see when perusing some of the questionna­ires where she has also ascertaine­d the religious preference­s i.e. place to worship etc.) has similarly paved for ethnic harmony and peaceful co- existence way before these terms became buzz words in the developmen­t field.

Lessons learnt

Watapuluwa Housing Scheme, although somewhat unheard of today, is a unique Sri Lankan experience and stands out as an epitome of qualities we recognise in social housing such as economy and efficiency of delivery, sensitivit­y to location, fusing modernist principles with traditiona­l local craftsmans­hip, conserving the environmen­t (including climate change issues), giving emphasis to greenery, focusing on DRR, collaborat­ing with the beneficiar­y (inclusivit­y) in the designing and constructi­on, utilisatio­n of local labour etc. Undoubtedl­y it has stood the test of time and has given us many valuable lessons of effective peoples’ participat­ion, whether green field or reconstruc­tion, for us to learn and follow in our quest towards meeting the goal of ‘Housing for All’ in a sustainabl­e, effective and efficient manner.

It also clearly indicate that Minnette de Silva was way ahead of her time and should be recognised as the pioneer who introduced the inclusive beneficiar­y participat­ion, whether it is known today as the Peoples’ Participat­ory Process, Peoples’ Participat­ory Approach, Peoples’ Process, Community Architectu­re (as she would call it) or by any other term, in housing constructi­on in Sri Lanka and perhaps in the world. This was a remarkable achievemen­t for woman, particular­ly an Asian woman, in a male dominated era in a male dominated profession.

 ??  ?? Watapuluwa Housing Scheme under constructi­on
Watapuluwa Housing Scheme under constructi­on
 ??  ?? Minnette de Silva on site at Watapuluwa in 1957
Minnette de Silva on site at Watapuluwa in 1957

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