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Friday, November 26, 1999

Sabarmati Ashram to get spanking new millennium image

RACHNA BISHT-RAWAT  
AHMEDABAD, NOV 25: Bright street lights, wide pedestrian paths, walkmans giving the history of the Dandi March as tourists stroll across the bridge the Mahatma took when he left the ashram for the last time, a splashing Sabarmati river-front, world class Gandhian institutes, an ideal Gandhian village where artisans live and work, refreshment counters, modern toilets, telephone kiosks and shops selling handmade paper, Gandhi glasses, chappals and khadi.

This is the vision two of the best architects in the city have of the neglected Gandhi Ashram, presently identified more with barren land, mosquito-ravaged sound and light shows and a dung-covered Dandi Pul.

As per the plans drawn up by architects B V Doshi and Yatin Pandya, which have been submitted to the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation, the idea is to develop the neglected 86-acre Sabarmati Ashram into an active, socio-cultural node throbbing with life for the city and possibly a world centre based on Gandhian ideals and ideas.

And the good news is thecorporation seems keen on implementing the project. According to Mayor Maliniben Atit, work will begin as soon as the development plan submitted by the AMC to the Government is cleared. ``We are committed to the cause and are ready to make as much budget allocation as is needed for Gandhi Ashram,'' she said.

``We have frozen all major construction in the Gandhi Ashram area. Once the development plan comes through, work will begin on the first step, which is linking Ashram Road to the 132-feet ring road, so that the heavy traffic which passes through the ashram premises can be diverted around it. We are committed to development of the ashram,'' adds Deputy Municipal Commissioner M K Das.

According to the plan submitted by Pandya, an ideal Gandhian village and craft/cottage industry will come up in the ashram area right next to Subhash Bridge. This would have an ashram, a goshala, dwelling units for artisans who would work in khadi, hand-made paper, leather and other industries within the campus, alongwith workshop clusters.

Further down the road there would be tourist offices, a library, and facilities for tourists to get bookings done, besides arrangements for holding seminars and conferences.

On the other side of the road in the area that is barren, Doshi and Pandya propose a Gandhian Institute of Leadership Management, Gandhi Peace Foundation, trust, a yoga institute, primary and secondary schools. Close by there would be provision for residential accommodation -- cottages, guest house, dormitories and staff quarters. The Smriti Sangrahalaya itself and the venue of the sound and light show is proposed to be developed further with a multi-media cell addition, an exhibition of the lavatories suggested by Gandhi, tableaux and an exhibition on the freedom struggle.

An apex trust was formed in July 1999, comprising one member from each of the eight trusts that presently manage the ashram. This trust would be the deciding authority for all the planned construction. The corporation is believed to belooking at a one-month time frame before the plan is approved and work can begin. Though Das was reluctant to make a commitment on that, he explained the basic idea was to let the present road, which cuts across the ashram, remain open only for pedestrians and light vehicles so that the sanctity of the place could be preserved.

If the plan comes through, work on restructuring the ashram will actually begin nearly five years after the brief was first submitted by the Vastu-Shilp Foundation for Studies and Research in Environmental Design. ``We prepared the note in September 1995. Our interest in reviving the ashram is that it is a place of historic and national significance and it should not be allowed to waste away. Our view was that it should not just be conserved because it is the Gandhi Ashram, but also because it is an important social node of the city,'' says Pandya.

``We have also suggested residential guest houses, cottages and dormitories, a park developed on the river front, and cleaning up andbeautification of the dirty water nullah that passes through the Chandrabhaga under the Dandi Pul, says Pandya. If the project is realised, the city will have a prime tourist attraction and revenue generating site.

Around 86.84 hectares of area that would comprise the Gandhi Ashram, the Jalvihar area proposed by the AMC in its development plan and a garden and picnic house, also proposed by the AMC in the same plan. And more importantly, a new lease of life for the decaying ashram.

What hampers the project

  • The slums at Rampir Tekra: Almost 100-m stretch of the Ashram Road that is linked to the 132-feet ring road is occupied by a squatter settlement which has gradually swelled over the years to about 400 dwelling units today. According to Deputy Municipal Commissioner M K Das, once the development plan submitted to the government is approved, the AMC has plans to shift the slumdwellers and resettle them. Though Das is unwilling to comment, the plan is expected to come through in amonth's time.
  • High tension wires of the AEC, before the approach to the Chimmanbhai Patel bridge, on the proposed site of the 132-feet ring road. The overhead lines stretch across 30 mts and underground wires will have to be laid to allow for construction of the road. The AMC has already made the necessary payment to the AEC and the process is on to shift the wires.
  • Traffic: Once the road is complete, the plan is to divert all heavy traffic off Gandhi Ashram, leaving the existing road open only for light vehicles and pedestrians, says Das. This would be the first step towards development of the ashram land.

    Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


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