Friday 20 April 2007

SHANKAR KANADE, ARCHITECT

Shankar Kanade, Architect: Illustrated Profile

 
S. N. Kanade

Man who walks the talk, my friend and guru
By Remigius de Souza

Jalavayu Vihar Township, Bangalore is a unique urban-scape. The township is not an assembly of stereotypical blocks. The varied skyline of the buildings, the shaded lanes that connect to open spaces add to the human scale. There are many elements that are rooted in traditional Indian towns. Perhaps they come from mimetic memory! These photographs show how the inmates have used their skills in plantation to add their signature. In this the complex helps to flower human potential. (This is an updated post.)


Shankar N. Kanade at Jalavayu Vihar

SHANKAR NIVRUTTI KANADE, my classmate, and friend for fifty years, is based in Bangalore and practices architecture and planning with his brother Navanath.

He has been teaching since 1960s, first at the Ahmadabad School of Architecture (now CEPT), later in various colleges in Karnataka. He, with others, founded department of architecture in Hassan in Karnataka. He also set up a course/ curriculum for another college.

The user use their autonomy to add in finishing touches

Kanade, on his own initiative, developed an indigenous construction technology, known as “Chhapadi” in Karnataka. It is highly labour intensive and uses local resources – people and materials. He worked on this system without any institutional support or finance. He designed and built several houses including his own, and mass housing for public sector.

Despite his friends’ advice he never took a patent for this product. Now others are using it. I heard that someone got an award for her/his design that used the technology. But the important factor is the unskilled/ skilled workers have learnt something new and benefited. His “pro-poor” product empowers the poor to earn livelihood.

The gateway holds o.h. water tank
I have seen and experienced some of these houses. When I visited Lohithashwa’s house, my spontaneous response was “I am reminded of India’s rock cut architecture”. I had also visited the house when Lohithashwa had hosted art workshop there, where other arts also flourished. Several artistes – potters, painters, and sculptors – were passionately working: I feel this may be a best, and the most appropriate tribute Kanade ever received for his work.

The township features traditional lanes
 I also visited his high-density township – “Jalavayu Vihar”; it is not built with the same technology mentioned above. At its ‘core’ is the ‘primordial image’ of Indian towns, but it’s not a prototype.

Plantation added by the user
 It has gates, shaded lanes, and multilevel open spaces, which give relief visually and physically from high-density development. Kanade brothers use and mold the Fifth Dimension of light of the tropical India, as building material.

The major material is local granite

When I returned there were friends gathered at Kanade's home. Architect Sanjay Mohe asked, ‘What did Remi see?’ Absentmindedly I replied, ‘Remi saw tiny honeybees busy’.

Kanade brothers use tropical sun to best advantage
There were honeybees smaller than house flies. They are harmless, and like common sparrows they make their homes in the snitches. Unlike beehives, they build small vessels to store honey, supported with wax tie bars. I was reminded of Aldo van Eyck who said, “… City is a big house”.

Movement through different scales

When Kanade came to Mumbai to study architecture, from his village in Sholapur district on the border of Maharashtra - Karnataka states, for some time he, with two other friends, lived in a slum in Santacruz. They called their home, “Chandramauli”, meaning a hut where moonlight penetrates through its roof (so also rainwater). Sounds romantic while reading!


Kanade's architecture is user-friendly

In some other country, Kanade would have received invitation form every college and association of architects. But who takes notice here? He is neither a foreigner nor foreign returned. Perhaps there is no budget provided for such luxury. What about his students and apprentices, who might have joined teaching?

Multiple uses of open spaces
Kanade never mentioned in decades that there is some research in ‘Building Technology’ going on in any college. While teaching the juniors in Ahmedabad, he gave exercises that took them to carpentry workshop.


Play of shade and light everywhere

Crores of Rupees are invested in establishment, infrastructure and running the colleges, besides the youth energy and their creativity that is spent on the campuses. [I raised this issue in my article, “Letters and Number plus Things to Make”, published in the JIIA, January2000 (edited version), and in ARCHeFUNDA, September 2000, (full text) edited by Prof. Harimohan Pillai.

Open spaces are connected lanes
What is the result? I heard that some highbrow management students asked the Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus to give them a model of “social banking” like his “Gramin Bank”. So that they could ‘copy-paste’ – ‘cut-paste’ in their dissertations and theses, to add to their credibility. They want ready answers! That’s education, youth creativity and energy!

There is movement in skyline too!
When we say architecture in India, it is a tail end or an extension of western architecture, which is not ‘universal’ in India. Kanade, of course, is a follower of the western trend that took place in India, now for more than hundred years.

Shankar and Navanath Kanade at Jalavayu Vihar


I personally may not agree on many established points regarding education, architecture and aesthetics, which I made public in my paper “Architecture and Biodiversity in India”. By their silence, my friends – Kanades and others, and the Indian fraternity of architects about this paper, I believe it remains controversial. The simplistic reason, I guess is the status quo attitude of educationists, which is typical of the bureaucrats. Yet, Kanade’s contribution to the building technology remains unique.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Remigius de Souza

21 comments:

  1. Hi Remi!
    We know how Indians value recognition from the foriegners, particularly the white people. We have not come out of our slave mentality even after sixty years of Independance!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. hi..
    can you please help me to find out Ar. Kanade's contact details.i wish to apply as a trainee.
    thank you

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello, ksarch,
    Address of Shri. S. N. Kanade

    S. N. Kanade
    SHILPA SINDUR
    Architects Planners
    511, Commerce House
    9/1, Cunningham Road
    Bangalore 560052
    Karnataka

    Best Wishes

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you very much... :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. can get his mail id or contact no for same purpose

    ReplyDelete
  6. You could see S N Kanade's postal address in the comments here...

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  7. @anonymous, Thanks for the information about phone no. and email ID, which I don't wish publish on public platform. I hope you get this feedback!!

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  8. IAM APARNA MITRA, I WORKED WITH S.N.KANADE AS A TRAINEE AND I STILL DONT FIND A BETTER PERSON AND MIND OTHER THAN HIM. HE'S A GENIOUS YET VERY DOWN TO EARTH. ALTHOUGH IAM AN ARCHITECT NOW BUT HE WILL ALWAYS BE MY GURU.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Aparna
      I have updated this post added by images.
      I am sorry to inform you, Shankar is loosing his eyesight...

      Delete
  9. Welcome Aparna! And thanks.

    Rarely I mention names unless inevitable, such as, Amrtya Sen. Even about myself I prefer to speak in third person (See my profile). I've written about very few: Saima Afreen – a poet, the Late Martin Carter (I met him in his poetry), Nold Egenter, besides Shankar Kanade.

    Frankly Shankar's work is in the realms of 'Good' - Rta (Indic noun), irrespective of recognition he deserves or gets, and rare examples these days. I say this though my path is different from his.

    Way back in early 1960s at college of architecture, I fondly used to call him 'Guru'. By that I do not mean a 'cult'. He deserves it by his way of thinking, living and working that I have witnessed.

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  10. plz can u help me for mail id of shilpa sindur architects to mail my portfolio for trainee...

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  11. @dharmesh, Please see the postal address in the comments above.

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  12. Dharmesh
    If you can post your email iD here, i'll maill you Shilpa sindoor's mail Id. I did my training under shankar sir and he's an amazing architect. they need a intern these days.
    Best wishes

    ReplyDelete
  13. @ksarch
    could u please post his email id.need to apply there for trainee's job.
    my email id is toshi.singh88@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  14. hi ksarch
    could u please post me shilpa sindoor's email id.? need to
    my email id is toshi.singh88@gmail.com need to apply there for internship.
    do reply.
    thanks

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  15. @toshi singh
    This is Kanade's e-mail:
    "Shankar Kanade"
    Wish you best of luck :)

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  16. Dear Readers, if you have subscribed, please see this updated text with photographs.

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  17. hey ksarch,
    could u please email me shilpa sindoor's email id.?
    my email id is janetkv11@gmail.com , wanted to apply there for my internship.

    thanks

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am Remigius de Souza.
      Kanade's emial ID "Shankar Kanade" shilpasindoor@yahoo.com

      Delete
  18. Hi Remigius de Souza
    I want to do a case study on keramane so is it possible to get his contact number? My email id is neeladitnandi@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You may write to his office / Kanade's emial ID "Shankar Kanade" shilpasindoor@yahoo.com

      Delete