The Topic is... What is Culture?
and... How is it related to Town
Planning?
This is actually a very interesting topic and very
thoughtful... and got my attention suddenly.
First Question that comes to my mind is -
-What is Culture?
Let's take upon the easiest of the researches :-
·
What Dictionary says ?
The
Art, customs and habits that characterize a particular society or Nation...
their belief and their values is known as Culture.
What Wikipedia says ?
Range
of Human phenomena that cannot be attributed to genetic inheritance.
The
distinct ways that people live differently, classified and represented their
experiences and acted creatively.
What 'I' think ?
According
to me culture is tradition... way of living, procedure of thinking, people's mindset
that developed; and is still developing; due to the Geographical and
Metaphysical environment of that Area.
Though, now a day's tradition or culture of a society may be linked to the
Globalization era, however, this point is still highly debatable.
Culture
is arguably one of the richest and most complex concepts in any language. There
are hundreds of definition and expressions in many locations.
Lets now take upon the Town planning.
Again... What does Town
planning or Urban Design means?
Well that's a technical and political
process concerned with the use of land and design of the urban environment,
including air, water and the infrastructure passing into and out of urban areas
such as transportation and distribution networks is known as Town Planning...
as stated by Wikipedia.
Planning
is not just Physical science but it is Human science. This is important to
understand that how Town Planning is related to Culture of a society.
Planning: Let's take this
word seriously. Planning is the organisational foundation from which all other
functions flow. Planners make spaces. Planning the town involves the intricate
details of understanding the requirements of the towns and its various
divisions and utilizing the land to the best of benefit. It is like promoting
development by implementing decisions and turning the town into a planned city,
without interfering with the environmental features.
Culture
had been a most intuitive way for planning in Histories. Throughout the history
we have read examples of well planned Cities. Designed cities were characteristic of the Minoan, Mesopotamian, Harappan, and Egyptian civilizations.
-Mohenjodaro
Distinct
characteristics of urban planning from remains of the cities of Harappa, Lothal,
and Mohenjo-Daro in the Indus valley civilization lead
archaeologists to conclude that they are the earliest examples of well planned
and managed cities. Archaeological evidence suggests that many
Harappan houses were laid out to protect from noise and enhance residential
privacy; many also had their own water wells, probably for both sanitary and
ritual purposes.
Arguably
some say... and I believe that India has an ancient History of refined urban
planning which could have been popularised and been more effective than Chandigarh
in terms of providing a more identifiable set of concepts and practices for its
urban citizens. Udaipur in Rajasthan, Fatehpur Sikri, Hampi, Vijaynagar and off
course the ancient Harrapan townships come to my mind.
Sir
Patrick Geddes was pioneering Town Planner who is known for innovative
thinking in the fields of Cultural Planning. He coined the
term Conurbation. His central
Argument was that physical geography, market economics and anthropology were
related. The purpose of his theory and understanding of relationships among the
units of society was to find an equilibrium among the people and the
environment to improve such conditions.
-What is A
Cultural Plan?
Vision
meets strategy in a cultural plan. A cultural plan translates the cultural
needs and identity of a community into a tool for implementing recommendation.
The arts, and broader cultural resources, amenities and facilities are
coming to be seen as strategic urban assets and they have an important and
strategic role to play in the new economy. We can best identify this actual and
potential role if we characterize the features and imperatives of this new
economy in the following ways and identify the possible contribution of the
arts and culture.
-What is
Conurbation?
A Conurbation is a region comprising a number of cities,
large towns, and other urban areas that, through population growth and physical
expansion, have merged to form one continuous urban and industrially developed
area. In most cases, a conurbation is a polycentric urban agglomeration, in
which transportation has developed to link areas to create a single urban
labour market or travel to work area.
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