Hindustan Times (Noida)

Delhi civic body brings in experts for major Town Hall renovation

- Paras Singh paras@hindustant­imes.com

The Municipal Corporatio­n of Delhi is collaborat­ing with the Aga Khan Trust to restore of the Town Hall building at Chandni Chowk even as the civic body has roped in the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) to develop a municipal museum and conserve rare documents and artefacts, officials said on Tuesday.

The constructi­on of the Town Hall building at Chandni Chowk was completed in 1866, and the municipali­ty operated from the iconic building for 145 years till 2011-12 before shifting to the new municipal headquarte­rs at the Civic Centre on Minto Road.

The building has since been lying vacant with some portions damaged due to lack of maintenanc­e. Now, officials said, the civic body not only plans to restore the original structure but also develop a municipal museum in the old Press building section of the complex.

A senior MCD official associated with the restoratio­n project said that the work has started on restoratio­n of the Town Hall building as well as conserving rare artefacts that will be displayed in the municipal museum.

“A Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) has been signed with IGNCA for the restoratio­n of artefacts and rare documents which are in MCD’S possession for the last 160 years. There are hundreds of artefacts which are in very poor condition, and they

have been taken out from storage. IGNCA has the expertise in restoring them as they have carried out similar projects. After restoratio­n, the artefacts will be displayed in the MCD museum,” the official who spoke on condition of anonymity added.

Restoratio­n plan

Even as the municipal museum project will be steered by IGNCA, a second MOU has been signed for the restoratio­n of the Town hall building complex with the Aga Khan Trust which had also worked on conservati­on of Humanyu’s Tomb and Sunder Nursery and both the projects will proceed simultaneo­usly, a second MCD official said.

This official said that the Aga

Khan Trust has carried out the survey of the Town Hall building to assess the damage, weak portions and scale of strengthen­ing required. “Based on this survey, they will submit a report which will be the basis of the estimate required for executing the restoratio­n project. The Aga Khan Trust will carry out the consultanc­y and MCD will implement the project,” the official added.

MCD says that the survey report is expected to be finalised in 1-2 months, and the overall project may take nine to 10 months to complete.

“The heritage buildings need specific interventi­ons. We can’t use modern plaster and techniques to restore the building. For instance, we will have to deploy similar lime mixtures which were used during the constructi­on of the building. The Trust will guide us to execute specialise­d works,” the official added.

To be sure, this is not the first attempt by MCD to restore the Town Hall complex. Several plans have been floated since 2012 to turn the building into a museum, library and hotel. Last year, the civic body planned to seek help from the Union ministry of culture to restore the building. Earlier, the erstwhile North MCD floated tenders to invite private players to turn the heritage structure into a hotel. However, all these plans were never executed.

Ratish Nanda, CEO, Aga Khan Trust for Culture India, said: “We have a longstandi­ng partnershi­p with MCD of almost 20 years. To support their efforts, we are preparing the conservati­on plan for the Town Hall building. It will be submitted in two weeks.”

Sohail Hashmi, a chronicler of Delhi’s history and heritage conservati­onist, said that the site of Town Hall used to host the caravan sarai of Begum Jahanara, and when the British took over the city, they wanted to remove the symbol of powers belonging to the Mughal empire. “The caravan sarai of Begum Jahan Ara was razed and the Begum ka Bagh was renamed as Company Bagh. The caravan sarai was replaced by a new building which then housed the Delhi Institute which had a library on the ground floor and a club for the Europeans on the first floor.

Later, it was named as Town Hall,” he said.

The Municipal Corporatio­n of Delhi, which was constitute­d in 1863, bought the building from various people who contribute­d money for the constructi­on for ₹1,35,457 in 1866, senior officials of the MCD’S Heritage Cell said.

Earlier plan

Hashmi said that in 2012, after being approached by MCD, he along with historian Narayani Gupta, conservati­on activist Anisha Shekhar and food expert Rahul Verma, jointly submitted a proposal to turn sections of Town Hall building into a library, restaurant, cultural centre and a boutique hotel. “The plan was to turn the ground floor into a library focusing on city history with collection of all books published about Delhi and its people. The Europeans had a club on first floor so we had proposed restaurant­s and site for regular food festivals. A space was earmarked for holding public concerts and musical events and the Chowki building in the Town Hall complex was to be turned into a boutique hotel. But the plan was put into the cold storage after the change of government in 2014. The plan would’ve ensured continuity, with activities that were happening in the building in the early days,” he added.

According to the latest proposal, the MCD plans to convert the Old Press building into a municipal museum, tracing the 160 years of evolution of the city and the municipali­ty.

 ?? HT ARCHIVES ?? The Town Hall (above). The MCD proposes to turn press building into a museum to display rare records and artefacts.
HT ARCHIVES The Town Hall (above). The MCD proposes to turn press building into a museum to display rare records and artefacts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India