Page 1
SPECIAL
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
FoCUS
Central Vista Redevelopment Project
Dr Bimal Patel
Development of Historic City Centres
Ratish Nanda
Brihadeeshwara Temple – A Stand-Alone Marvel
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan
Revisiting ‘Brutalist’ Architecture
Dr Manjari Chakraborty
DECEMBER 2022 A DEVELoPMEnT MonTHL y
Page 2
SPECIAL
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
FoCUS
Central Vista Redevelopment Project
Dr Bimal Patel
Development of Historic City Centres
Ratish Nanda
Brihadeeshwara Temple – A Stand-Alone Marvel
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan
Revisiting ‘Brutalist’ Architecture
Dr Manjari Chakraborty
DECEMBER 2022 A DEVELoPMEnT MonTHL y
December 2022
YOJANA
Volume-66
No. 12
A DEVELOPMENT MONTHLY
Let noble thoughts come to us from all sides.
Rig Veda
Website: www.publicationsdivision.nic.in
@DPD_India
@publicationsdivision
@dpd_india
In ThIs Issue
number of pages: 56
uPCOMInG Issue : MIlleT s
Details of the Sales Outlets of the Publications Division on Page 14
YOJANA is published in Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam,
Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.
Since 1957
sPeCIal ar TICles
RE-sTRUcTURinG URBAn
GAlAxiE s
Dr Balkrishna Doshi ..........................7
FOCus
cEnTRAl Vis TA REdEVEl OPMEnT
PROjEcT
dr Bimal Patel ................................11
dEVEl OPMEnT Of His TORic
ciTy cEnTRE s
Ratish nanda .................................19
sTATUE Of UniTy
Prof dr P s n Rao,
Prof dr Anil dewan ........................ 35
UniVER sAl PUBlic dE siGns
dr jithendran s .............................. 43
ARcHiTEcTURE f OR HEAl TH
And WEll-BEinG
dr Raja singh ................................. 47
Chief eDitoR
rakeshrenu
eDitoR
shuChIT a Cha TurvedI
oUR REPRESEnTATIVES
Ahmedabad: sumanben A Machhar , Bengaluru:
BK Kiranmai, Bhubaneswar: itishree singh Rathaur ,
chennai: sanjay Ghosh, Guwahati: Maruf Alam,
Hyderabad: Krishna Vandana P , jalandhar: Gagandeep
Kaur devgan, Kolkata: Khurshid Mallick, Mumbai:
Umesh Ujgare: Thiruvananthapuram: Roy chacko.
JoiNt DiReC toR , PRoDuC tioN
d k C hrudhaIna Th
CoveR DesigN
BIndu verMa
Yojana (English): Room no. 647, soochna Bhawan,
cGO complex, lodhi Road, new delhi-110 003.
E-mail (Editorial): sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
YOJANA, a development monthly published since
1957, is a theme-based journal providing in-depth
analyses and views on socio-economic issues in
the broader framework of government policies.
Although published by the Ministry of information
and Broadcasting, YOJANA is not restricted to
expressing the official point of view.
dIsClaIMer
l The vie ws e xpre sse d in various articles are
those of the authors and the y do not ne c essarily
re flect the vie ws of the Go vernme n t or the
organisation/ s the y work f or .
l Map s/flags use d in the article s are only indic ative
and the y do not re flect the politic al map or le gal
re presen t ation of the flag of India/an y othe r
c oun try .
l The inf ographics/figure s are pro vide d b y the
authors through the ir re liable sourc e s and
YOJANA claims no re sponsibility f or the same.
l Image s, graphics and illus trations, whe re ve r
use d, are mos tly sourc ed from go vernme n t
channels and are indic ative in nature .
l YOJANA does not o wn re sponsibility re garding
the c on t e n ts of the adve rtise men ts. The re aders
are re que s t e d t o ve rify the claims made in the
adve rtise men ts re garding c ourse s, c are e r -
guidanc e book s or ins titutions.
l YOJANA doesn't e ndorse or promot e an y brands
or privat e e n titie s prese n t ed as c ase s tudie s in an y
of the article s.
suBsCrIPTIOn/GrIevanCes
Email: pdjucir@gmail.com
Phone: 011-24367453
(Monday-Friday, 9:30 am- 6:00 pm)
Postal Address: Abhishek Chaturvedi, Editor,
journals Unit, Publications division, Room n o.
779, soochna Bhawan, cGO complex, lodhi
Road, n ew delhi-110 003.
Please not e that it will t ak e atleas t eigh t
week s t o s t art your sub scrip tion. Kindly raise
your queries/grie vanc es about non rec eip t of the
journals only aft er this period.
SUBSCRIPTION-RELATED DETAILS : Page 54
re Gulars
DEvELOPMENT ROADMAP – Kartavya Path ......................................................... 16
MANN KI BAAT – Kabaad se Jugaad ....................................................................... 32
OUR BOOKS – kishore dot Com .............................................................................. 38
Interpreting Geometries— Flooring of Rashtrapati Bhavan ...... cover-iii
dO YOu knO w? Earthquake-Resistant Construction ............................................ 40
G20 – India’s G20 Presidency: Significance & Opportunities .................................. 51
BRiHAdEE sHWARA TEMPlE –
A sTAnd-Al On E MARVEl
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan ...... 23
REVisiTin G ‘BRUTAlis T’
ARcHiTEcTURE
dr Manjari chakraborty ................. 29
Page 3
SPECIAL
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
FoCUS
Central Vista Redevelopment Project
Dr Bimal Patel
Development of Historic City Centres
Ratish Nanda
Brihadeeshwara Temple – A Stand-Alone Marvel
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan
Revisiting ‘Brutalist’ Architecture
Dr Manjari Chakraborty
DECEMBER 2022 A DEVELoPMEnT MonTHL y
December 2022
YOJANA
Volume-66
No. 12
A DEVELOPMENT MONTHLY
Let noble thoughts come to us from all sides.
Rig Veda
Website: www.publicationsdivision.nic.in
@DPD_India
@publicationsdivision
@dpd_india
In ThIs Issue
number of pages: 56
uPCOMInG Issue : MIlleT s
Details of the Sales Outlets of the Publications Division on Page 14
YOJANA is published in Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam,
Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.
Since 1957
sPeCIal ar TICles
RE-sTRUcTURinG URBAn
GAlAxiE s
Dr Balkrishna Doshi ..........................7
FOCus
cEnTRAl Vis TA REdEVEl OPMEnT
PROjEcT
dr Bimal Patel ................................11
dEVEl OPMEnT Of His TORic
ciTy cEnTRE s
Ratish nanda .................................19
sTATUE Of UniTy
Prof dr P s n Rao,
Prof dr Anil dewan ........................ 35
UniVER sAl PUBlic dE siGns
dr jithendran s .............................. 43
ARcHiTEcTURE f OR HEAl TH
And WEll-BEinG
dr Raja singh ................................. 47
Chief eDitoR
rakeshrenu
eDitoR
shuChIT a Cha TurvedI
oUR REPRESEnTATIVES
Ahmedabad: sumanben A Machhar , Bengaluru:
BK Kiranmai, Bhubaneswar: itishree singh Rathaur ,
chennai: sanjay Ghosh, Guwahati: Maruf Alam,
Hyderabad: Krishna Vandana P , jalandhar: Gagandeep
Kaur devgan, Kolkata: Khurshid Mallick, Mumbai:
Umesh Ujgare: Thiruvananthapuram: Roy chacko.
JoiNt DiReC toR , PRoDuC tioN
d k C hrudhaIna Th
CoveR DesigN
BIndu verMa
Yojana (English): Room no. 647, soochna Bhawan,
cGO complex, lodhi Road, new delhi-110 003.
E-mail (Editorial): sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
YOJANA, a development monthly published since
1957, is a theme-based journal providing in-depth
analyses and views on socio-economic issues in
the broader framework of government policies.
Although published by the Ministry of information
and Broadcasting, YOJANA is not restricted to
expressing the official point of view.
dIsClaIMer
l The vie ws e xpre sse d in various articles are
those of the authors and the y do not ne c essarily
re flect the vie ws of the Go vernme n t or the
organisation/ s the y work f or .
l Map s/flags use d in the article s are only indic ative
and the y do not re flect the politic al map or le gal
re presen t ation of the flag of India/an y othe r
c oun try .
l The inf ographics/figure s are pro vide d b y the
authors through the ir re liable sourc e s and
YOJANA claims no re sponsibility f or the same.
l Image s, graphics and illus trations, whe re ve r
use d, are mos tly sourc ed from go vernme n t
channels and are indic ative in nature .
l YOJANA does not o wn re sponsibility re garding
the c on t e n ts of the adve rtise men ts. The re aders
are re que s t e d t o ve rify the claims made in the
adve rtise men ts re garding c ourse s, c are e r -
guidanc e book s or ins titutions.
l YOJANA doesn't e ndorse or promot e an y brands
or privat e e n titie s prese n t ed as c ase s tudie s in an y
of the article s.
suBsCrIPTIOn/GrIevanCes
Email: pdjucir@gmail.com
Phone: 011-24367453
(Monday-Friday, 9:30 am- 6:00 pm)
Postal Address: Abhishek Chaturvedi, Editor,
journals Unit, Publications division, Room n o.
779, soochna Bhawan, cGO complex, lodhi
Road, n ew delhi-110 003.
Please not e that it will t ak e atleas t eigh t
week s t o s t art your sub scrip tion. Kindly raise
your queries/grie vanc es about non rec eip t of the
journals only aft er this period.
SUBSCRIPTION-RELATED DETAILS : Page 54
re Gulars
DEvELOPMENT ROADMAP – Kartavya Path ......................................................... 16
MANN KI BAAT – Kabaad se Jugaad ....................................................................... 32
OUR BOOKS – kishore dot Com .............................................................................. 38
Interpreting Geometries— Flooring of Rashtrapati Bhavan ...... cover-iii
dO YOu knO w? Earthquake-Resistant Construction ............................................ 40
G20 – India’s G20 Presidency: Significance & Opportunities .................................. 51
BRiHAdEE sHWARA TEMPlE –
A sTAnd-Al On E MARVEl
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan ...... 23
REVisiTin G ‘BRUTAlis T’
ARcHiTEcTURE
dr Manjari chakraborty ................. 29
4 YOJANA December 2022
Issue on Tribal India
I am a regular reader of Yojana. The articles in the July
issue were very helpful and informative. I enjoyed reading
them. With useful facts and figures, every author presented
the tribe-development continuum. I am very grateful to the
editor for this marvelous and collectible issue. The editorial
was also on point. I thank the whole team of Yojana for
their consistent dedication and hard work.
– Prabhat Kumar Mishra
Uttar Pradesh
Promoting Indigenous Medicinal Plants
Respected Editorial Team, I am grateful for the
October issue on Our Ecosystem. I would like to send
my regards to the editorial team, for publishing a
specific section on the North Eastern Region through
the article titled, ‘Indigenous Bio-resources of the
NE Region.’ While the article provided good insights
on the medicinal plant species of the region and the
conservation techniques, it also reminded me of the
fact that from a very young age, I was introduced with
these very medicinal plants specifically mentioned in
the article as these plants were very much part of our
daily consumption practices. I believe that community
awareness on the importance of such medicinal plants
may also further the conservation process as most
indigenous communities use such medicinal plants.
It is interesting how our elders without any scientific
knowledge have long known the importance of these
medicinal plants and made it a part of our daily
consumption practices.
– Lukumoni Sonowal
New Delhi
Useful for Civil Services Aspirants
All aspirants for every competitive exam look for
resources to tackle current affairs for which they search
for every corner of books and resources available in the
market and social platforms. But I believe selection and
quality of material matter a lot and it is not easy to find
out. But going through Yojana editorials, I say that it
is a must read. It is helping me a lot to cover current
Inbox
sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
affairs. As it is the real essence of current affairs related
to government policies etc., so, civil services aspirants
and others who are preparing for competitive exams
should make use of this.
– Nikhil Y adav
Uttar Pradesh
Managing Water Resources
Both the articles ‘Water Governance’ and ‘Our Water
Heroes’ in the October issue gain utmost importance at a
time when the monsoon woes this year have been causing
ample anxiety, especially to agrarian communities. This
indicates that we have to manage our water resources with
professionalism since no one is aware of the water shortage
during the ensuing summer. We must learn the value of
natural resources.
– Susheela B. R. Ramanna
Karnataka
Epitome of Knowledge
Your monthly magazine is amazing, wonderfully
blended with authentic data and analysis because of the
way you make each topic easy-to-read and one can retain
these for longer periods of time. Your content is full of
insights and one can trace what is going on in our country
in general and those who are preparing for civil services,
in particular, will gain heavily. Your every edition is the
epitome of knowledge enhancement. Thank you for such
an amazing journal.
– Shubham Kumar
Bihar
Subscribing Y ojana
I have been reading Yojana for the past nine months.
Subscribing and reading Yojana was one of the best
decisions of my life. It has helped me to expand and
acquire relevant knowledge on various topics. Every
article helps create a deeper understanding of the issues
rather than surface-level knowledge. Thank you for being
instrumental in my UPSC preparation.
– Anjana R
Kerala
Page 4
SPECIAL
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
FoCUS
Central Vista Redevelopment Project
Dr Bimal Patel
Development of Historic City Centres
Ratish Nanda
Brihadeeshwara Temple – A Stand-Alone Marvel
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan
Revisiting ‘Brutalist’ Architecture
Dr Manjari Chakraborty
DECEMBER 2022 A DEVELoPMEnT MonTHL y
December 2022
YOJANA
Volume-66
No. 12
A DEVELOPMENT MONTHLY
Let noble thoughts come to us from all sides.
Rig Veda
Website: www.publicationsdivision.nic.in
@DPD_India
@publicationsdivision
@dpd_india
In ThIs Issue
number of pages: 56
uPCOMInG Issue : MIlleT s
Details of the Sales Outlets of the Publications Division on Page 14
YOJANA is published in Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam,
Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.
Since 1957
sPeCIal ar TICles
RE-sTRUcTURinG URBAn
GAlAxiE s
Dr Balkrishna Doshi ..........................7
FOCus
cEnTRAl Vis TA REdEVEl OPMEnT
PROjEcT
dr Bimal Patel ................................11
dEVEl OPMEnT Of His TORic
ciTy cEnTRE s
Ratish nanda .................................19
sTATUE Of UniTy
Prof dr P s n Rao,
Prof dr Anil dewan ........................ 35
UniVER sAl PUBlic dE siGns
dr jithendran s .............................. 43
ARcHiTEcTURE f OR HEAl TH
And WEll-BEinG
dr Raja singh ................................. 47
Chief eDitoR
rakeshrenu
eDitoR
shuChIT a Cha TurvedI
oUR REPRESEnTATIVES
Ahmedabad: sumanben A Machhar , Bengaluru:
BK Kiranmai, Bhubaneswar: itishree singh Rathaur ,
chennai: sanjay Ghosh, Guwahati: Maruf Alam,
Hyderabad: Krishna Vandana P , jalandhar: Gagandeep
Kaur devgan, Kolkata: Khurshid Mallick, Mumbai:
Umesh Ujgare: Thiruvananthapuram: Roy chacko.
JoiNt DiReC toR , PRoDuC tioN
d k C hrudhaIna Th
CoveR DesigN
BIndu verMa
Yojana (English): Room no. 647, soochna Bhawan,
cGO complex, lodhi Road, new delhi-110 003.
E-mail (Editorial): sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
YOJANA, a development monthly published since
1957, is a theme-based journal providing in-depth
analyses and views on socio-economic issues in
the broader framework of government policies.
Although published by the Ministry of information
and Broadcasting, YOJANA is not restricted to
expressing the official point of view.
dIsClaIMer
l The vie ws e xpre sse d in various articles are
those of the authors and the y do not ne c essarily
re flect the vie ws of the Go vernme n t or the
organisation/ s the y work f or .
l Map s/flags use d in the article s are only indic ative
and the y do not re flect the politic al map or le gal
re presen t ation of the flag of India/an y othe r
c oun try .
l The inf ographics/figure s are pro vide d b y the
authors through the ir re liable sourc e s and
YOJANA claims no re sponsibility f or the same.
l Image s, graphics and illus trations, whe re ve r
use d, are mos tly sourc ed from go vernme n t
channels and are indic ative in nature .
l YOJANA does not o wn re sponsibility re garding
the c on t e n ts of the adve rtise men ts. The re aders
are re que s t e d t o ve rify the claims made in the
adve rtise men ts re garding c ourse s, c are e r -
guidanc e book s or ins titutions.
l YOJANA doesn't e ndorse or promot e an y brands
or privat e e n titie s prese n t ed as c ase s tudie s in an y
of the article s.
suBsCrIPTIOn/GrIevanCes
Email: pdjucir@gmail.com
Phone: 011-24367453
(Monday-Friday, 9:30 am- 6:00 pm)
Postal Address: Abhishek Chaturvedi, Editor,
journals Unit, Publications division, Room n o.
779, soochna Bhawan, cGO complex, lodhi
Road, n ew delhi-110 003.
Please not e that it will t ak e atleas t eigh t
week s t o s t art your sub scrip tion. Kindly raise
your queries/grie vanc es about non rec eip t of the
journals only aft er this period.
SUBSCRIPTION-RELATED DETAILS : Page 54
re Gulars
DEvELOPMENT ROADMAP – Kartavya Path ......................................................... 16
MANN KI BAAT – Kabaad se Jugaad ....................................................................... 32
OUR BOOKS – kishore dot Com .............................................................................. 38
Interpreting Geometries— Flooring of Rashtrapati Bhavan ...... cover-iii
dO YOu knO w? Earthquake-Resistant Construction ............................................ 40
G20 – India’s G20 Presidency: Significance & Opportunities .................................. 51
BRiHAdEE sHWARA TEMPlE –
A sTAnd-Al On E MARVEl
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan ...... 23
REVisiTin G ‘BRUTAlis T’
ARcHiTEcTURE
dr Manjari chakraborty ................. 29
4 YOJANA December 2022
Issue on Tribal India
I am a regular reader of Yojana. The articles in the July
issue were very helpful and informative. I enjoyed reading
them. With useful facts and figures, every author presented
the tribe-development continuum. I am very grateful to the
editor for this marvelous and collectible issue. The editorial
was also on point. I thank the whole team of Yojana for
their consistent dedication and hard work.
– Prabhat Kumar Mishra
Uttar Pradesh
Promoting Indigenous Medicinal Plants
Respected Editorial Team, I am grateful for the
October issue on Our Ecosystem. I would like to send
my regards to the editorial team, for publishing a
specific section on the North Eastern Region through
the article titled, ‘Indigenous Bio-resources of the
NE Region.’ While the article provided good insights
on the medicinal plant species of the region and the
conservation techniques, it also reminded me of the
fact that from a very young age, I was introduced with
these very medicinal plants specifically mentioned in
the article as these plants were very much part of our
daily consumption practices. I believe that community
awareness on the importance of such medicinal plants
may also further the conservation process as most
indigenous communities use such medicinal plants.
It is interesting how our elders without any scientific
knowledge have long known the importance of these
medicinal plants and made it a part of our daily
consumption practices.
– Lukumoni Sonowal
New Delhi
Useful for Civil Services Aspirants
All aspirants for every competitive exam look for
resources to tackle current affairs for which they search
for every corner of books and resources available in the
market and social platforms. But I believe selection and
quality of material matter a lot and it is not easy to find
out. But going through Yojana editorials, I say that it
is a must read. It is helping me a lot to cover current
Inbox
sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
affairs. As it is the real essence of current affairs related
to government policies etc., so, civil services aspirants
and others who are preparing for competitive exams
should make use of this.
– Nikhil Y adav
Uttar Pradesh
Managing Water Resources
Both the articles ‘Water Governance’ and ‘Our Water
Heroes’ in the October issue gain utmost importance at a
time when the monsoon woes this year have been causing
ample anxiety, especially to agrarian communities. This
indicates that we have to manage our water resources with
professionalism since no one is aware of the water shortage
during the ensuing summer. We must learn the value of
natural resources.
– Susheela B. R. Ramanna
Karnataka
Epitome of Knowledge
Your monthly magazine is amazing, wonderfully
blended with authentic data and analysis because of the
way you make each topic easy-to-read and one can retain
these for longer periods of time. Your content is full of
insights and one can trace what is going on in our country
in general and those who are preparing for civil services,
in particular, will gain heavily. Your every edition is the
epitome of knowledge enhancement. Thank you for such
an amazing journal.
– Shubham Kumar
Bihar
Subscribing Y ojana
I have been reading Yojana for the past nine months.
Subscribing and reading Yojana was one of the best
decisions of my life. It has helped me to expand and
acquire relevant knowledge on various topics. Every
article helps create a deeper understanding of the issues
rather than surface-level knowledge. Thank you for being
instrumental in my UPSC preparation.
– Anjana R
Kerala
YOJANA December 2022 5
Editorial
YOJANA
Monumental Marvels
A
rchitecture defines a space. It is the body and
soul that forms the identity of a building,
locality, town, city, or nation. Places are often
associated with the surrounding monuments,
iconic buildings, landscapes, places of worship,
and even the bylanes. For any enthusiast, merely
taking a bus ride or a stroll in the old and new parts
of a city can be a diverse experience. From older
minimalist designs to lavish glass-tinted buildings,
from chowkhats and jharokhas to façades, from high-
rises to small houses with grand courtyards, and from
heritage or art deco to planned townships, there is so
much to see and explore. And, if the places are an
amalgamation of old and new, consider cities like
Varanasi or Delhi, then it is a double delight. Each unique style, building materials used,
patterns, and overall vibes reflect the unique stories of the era they would have been built
in. They also tell us a lot about the needs, and aesthetic and design senses of the people who
would have owned or built them.
The same goes for a country. Its iconic buildings or structures are the ones that make a
mark on the travellers who come from far and wide. They are mostly used as representational
images of the country on the internet and in publications. Such is the monumental importance
of architecture.
Through this issue of Yojana, we have tried to understand the vision and perspectives
behind the iconic works done in the field of architecture and where they stand today.
Eminent professionals have shared their valuable viewpoints and insights into making of
these architectural marvels from brick and mortar. They have also dwelled upon how urban
spaces are shaping up in modern times and what challenges of development lie ahead of us in
the light of sustainability, rising population, and changing demographics and lifestyles. Also,
how people around can be engaged and made a part of these processes and stories through
active participation and community building.
India is at the cusp of transformation on various fronts. This includes redefining
the identity that the nation has been associated with through its colonial past. The same
is envisioned in the recent redevelopment projects including at the Central Vista in the
capital city of New Delhi. There have been multiple iconic developments in this regard
coinciding with the Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav that instill pride among the people including
the Pradhanmantri Sangrahalaya, Kartavya Path, and Statue of Unity.
We are hopeful that this issue of Yojana will encourage its readers to venture out with an
appreciative eye for detail, explore these marvels of architecture and design that are around
us and discover the stories behind them. ?
“...But a few understand that building is a great symbol we live in our minds, and existence
is the attempt to bring that life into physical reality, to state it in gesture and form. For the
man who understands this, a house he owns is a statement of his life.”
? Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead
Page 5
SPECIAL
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
FoCUS
Central Vista Redevelopment Project
Dr Bimal Patel
Development of Historic City Centres
Ratish Nanda
Brihadeeshwara Temple – A Stand-Alone Marvel
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan
Revisiting ‘Brutalist’ Architecture
Dr Manjari Chakraborty
DECEMBER 2022 A DEVELoPMEnT MonTHL y
December 2022
YOJANA
Volume-66
No. 12
A DEVELOPMENT MONTHLY
Let noble thoughts come to us from all sides.
Rig Veda
Website: www.publicationsdivision.nic.in
@DPD_India
@publicationsdivision
@dpd_india
In ThIs Issue
number of pages: 56
uPCOMInG Issue : MIlleT s
Details of the Sales Outlets of the Publications Division on Page 14
YOJANA is published in Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam,
Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.
Since 1957
sPeCIal ar TICles
RE-sTRUcTURinG URBAn
GAlAxiE s
Dr Balkrishna Doshi ..........................7
FOCus
cEnTRAl Vis TA REdEVEl OPMEnT
PROjEcT
dr Bimal Patel ................................11
dEVEl OPMEnT Of His TORic
ciTy cEnTRE s
Ratish nanda .................................19
sTATUE Of UniTy
Prof dr P s n Rao,
Prof dr Anil dewan ........................ 35
UniVER sAl PUBlic dE siGns
dr jithendran s .............................. 43
ARcHiTEcTURE f OR HEAl TH
And WEll-BEinG
dr Raja singh ................................. 47
Chief eDitoR
rakeshrenu
eDitoR
shuChIT a Cha TurvedI
oUR REPRESEnTATIVES
Ahmedabad: sumanben A Machhar , Bengaluru:
BK Kiranmai, Bhubaneswar: itishree singh Rathaur ,
chennai: sanjay Ghosh, Guwahati: Maruf Alam,
Hyderabad: Krishna Vandana P , jalandhar: Gagandeep
Kaur devgan, Kolkata: Khurshid Mallick, Mumbai:
Umesh Ujgare: Thiruvananthapuram: Roy chacko.
JoiNt DiReC toR , PRoDuC tioN
d k C hrudhaIna Th
CoveR DesigN
BIndu verMa
Yojana (English): Room no. 647, soochna Bhawan,
cGO complex, lodhi Road, new delhi-110 003.
E-mail (Editorial): sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
YOJANA, a development monthly published since
1957, is a theme-based journal providing in-depth
analyses and views on socio-economic issues in
the broader framework of government policies.
Although published by the Ministry of information
and Broadcasting, YOJANA is not restricted to
expressing the official point of view.
dIsClaIMer
l The vie ws e xpre sse d in various articles are
those of the authors and the y do not ne c essarily
re flect the vie ws of the Go vernme n t or the
organisation/ s the y work f or .
l Map s/flags use d in the article s are only indic ative
and the y do not re flect the politic al map or le gal
re presen t ation of the flag of India/an y othe r
c oun try .
l The inf ographics/figure s are pro vide d b y the
authors through the ir re liable sourc e s and
YOJANA claims no re sponsibility f or the same.
l Image s, graphics and illus trations, whe re ve r
use d, are mos tly sourc ed from go vernme n t
channels and are indic ative in nature .
l YOJANA does not o wn re sponsibility re garding
the c on t e n ts of the adve rtise men ts. The re aders
are re que s t e d t o ve rify the claims made in the
adve rtise men ts re garding c ourse s, c are e r -
guidanc e book s or ins titutions.
l YOJANA doesn't e ndorse or promot e an y brands
or privat e e n titie s prese n t ed as c ase s tudie s in an y
of the article s.
suBsCrIPTIOn/GrIevanCes
Email: pdjucir@gmail.com
Phone: 011-24367453
(Monday-Friday, 9:30 am- 6:00 pm)
Postal Address: Abhishek Chaturvedi, Editor,
journals Unit, Publications division, Room n o.
779, soochna Bhawan, cGO complex, lodhi
Road, n ew delhi-110 003.
Please not e that it will t ak e atleas t eigh t
week s t o s t art your sub scrip tion. Kindly raise
your queries/grie vanc es about non rec eip t of the
journals only aft er this period.
SUBSCRIPTION-RELATED DETAILS : Page 54
re Gulars
DEvELOPMENT ROADMAP – Kartavya Path ......................................................... 16
MANN KI BAAT – Kabaad se Jugaad ....................................................................... 32
OUR BOOKS – kishore dot Com .............................................................................. 38
Interpreting Geometries— Flooring of Rashtrapati Bhavan ...... cover-iii
dO YOu knO w? Earthquake-Resistant Construction ............................................ 40
G20 – India’s G20 Presidency: Significance & Opportunities .................................. 51
BRiHAdEE sHWARA TEMPlE –
A sTAnd-Al On E MARVEl
Madhusudhanan Kalaichelvan ...... 23
REVisiTin G ‘BRUTAlis T’
ARcHiTEcTURE
dr Manjari chakraborty ................. 29
4 YOJANA December 2022
Issue on Tribal India
I am a regular reader of Yojana. The articles in the July
issue were very helpful and informative. I enjoyed reading
them. With useful facts and figures, every author presented
the tribe-development continuum. I am very grateful to the
editor for this marvelous and collectible issue. The editorial
was also on point. I thank the whole team of Yojana for
their consistent dedication and hard work.
– Prabhat Kumar Mishra
Uttar Pradesh
Promoting Indigenous Medicinal Plants
Respected Editorial Team, I am grateful for the
October issue on Our Ecosystem. I would like to send
my regards to the editorial team, for publishing a
specific section on the North Eastern Region through
the article titled, ‘Indigenous Bio-resources of the
NE Region.’ While the article provided good insights
on the medicinal plant species of the region and the
conservation techniques, it also reminded me of the
fact that from a very young age, I was introduced with
these very medicinal plants specifically mentioned in
the article as these plants were very much part of our
daily consumption practices. I believe that community
awareness on the importance of such medicinal plants
may also further the conservation process as most
indigenous communities use such medicinal plants.
It is interesting how our elders without any scientific
knowledge have long known the importance of these
medicinal plants and made it a part of our daily
consumption practices.
– Lukumoni Sonowal
New Delhi
Useful for Civil Services Aspirants
All aspirants for every competitive exam look for
resources to tackle current affairs for which they search
for every corner of books and resources available in the
market and social platforms. But I believe selection and
quality of material matter a lot and it is not easy to find
out. But going through Yojana editorials, I say that it
is a must read. It is helping me a lot to cover current
Inbox
sec-yojanaeng-moib@gov.in
affairs. As it is the real essence of current affairs related
to government policies etc., so, civil services aspirants
and others who are preparing for competitive exams
should make use of this.
– Nikhil Y adav
Uttar Pradesh
Managing Water Resources
Both the articles ‘Water Governance’ and ‘Our Water
Heroes’ in the October issue gain utmost importance at a
time when the monsoon woes this year have been causing
ample anxiety, especially to agrarian communities. This
indicates that we have to manage our water resources with
professionalism since no one is aware of the water shortage
during the ensuing summer. We must learn the value of
natural resources.
– Susheela B. R. Ramanna
Karnataka
Epitome of Knowledge
Your monthly magazine is amazing, wonderfully
blended with authentic data and analysis because of the
way you make each topic easy-to-read and one can retain
these for longer periods of time. Your content is full of
insights and one can trace what is going on in our country
in general and those who are preparing for civil services,
in particular, will gain heavily. Your every edition is the
epitome of knowledge enhancement. Thank you for such
an amazing journal.
– Shubham Kumar
Bihar
Subscribing Y ojana
I have been reading Yojana for the past nine months.
Subscribing and reading Yojana was one of the best
decisions of my life. It has helped me to expand and
acquire relevant knowledge on various topics. Every
article helps create a deeper understanding of the issues
rather than surface-level knowledge. Thank you for being
instrumental in my UPSC preparation.
– Anjana R
Kerala
YOJANA December 2022 5
Editorial
YOJANA
Monumental Marvels
A
rchitecture defines a space. It is the body and
soul that forms the identity of a building,
locality, town, city, or nation. Places are often
associated with the surrounding monuments,
iconic buildings, landscapes, places of worship,
and even the bylanes. For any enthusiast, merely
taking a bus ride or a stroll in the old and new parts
of a city can be a diverse experience. From older
minimalist designs to lavish glass-tinted buildings,
from chowkhats and jharokhas to façades, from high-
rises to small houses with grand courtyards, and from
heritage or art deco to planned townships, there is so
much to see and explore. And, if the places are an
amalgamation of old and new, consider cities like
Varanasi or Delhi, then it is a double delight. Each unique style, building materials used,
patterns, and overall vibes reflect the unique stories of the era they would have been built
in. They also tell us a lot about the needs, and aesthetic and design senses of the people who
would have owned or built them.
The same goes for a country. Its iconic buildings or structures are the ones that make a
mark on the travellers who come from far and wide. They are mostly used as representational
images of the country on the internet and in publications. Such is the monumental importance
of architecture.
Through this issue of Yojana, we have tried to understand the vision and perspectives
behind the iconic works done in the field of architecture and where they stand today.
Eminent professionals have shared their valuable viewpoints and insights into making of
these architectural marvels from brick and mortar. They have also dwelled upon how urban
spaces are shaping up in modern times and what challenges of development lie ahead of us in
the light of sustainability, rising population, and changing demographics and lifestyles. Also,
how people around can be engaged and made a part of these processes and stories through
active participation and community building.
India is at the cusp of transformation on various fronts. This includes redefining
the identity that the nation has been associated with through its colonial past. The same
is envisioned in the recent redevelopment projects including at the Central Vista in the
capital city of New Delhi. There have been multiple iconic developments in this regard
coinciding with the Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav that instill pride among the people including
the Pradhanmantri Sangrahalaya, Kartavya Path, and Statue of Unity.
We are hopeful that this issue of Yojana will encourage its readers to venture out with an
appreciative eye for detail, explore these marvels of architecture and design that are around
us and discover the stories behind them. ?
“...But a few understand that building is a great symbol we live in our minds, and existence
is the attempt to bring that life into physical reality, to state it in gesture and form. For the
man who understands this, a house he owns is a statement of his life.”
? Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead
YOJANA December 2022 7
here is a great talk nowadays about sustainable
development in Indian cities and towns.
However, we need to understand this fully
and see how these goals can trigger other
developments without harming the region or the lifestyle.
For me, sustainability ensures long-lasting development
without becoming unduly centralised– similar to a biological
order, therefore, we should consider a way that replicates and
triggers the creation of another similar or mutated unit. For
example, an elephant or a human being, or
even an ant, after maturity, does not grow
beyond its ‘ultimate’ size– if it does, it
automatically gets destroyed, succumbing
to external pressures by internal failure. I
am reminded of the large dinosaurs of the
Jurassic Age.
Likewise, we need to review our
present mega-cities and metropolises.
By improving their infrastructure, we
will surely improve their functioning, but
we may not upgrade the quality of life.
Besides, due to our development focus of
concentrating around one place/city, all the
institutions and employment opportunities,
we are denuding the smaller towns in
the region of their small-scale crafts and
industries, and encouraging migration and
Re-structuring Urban Galaxies
Dr Balkrishna Doshi
The author is the first Indian architect who was awarded the Pritzker Prize, along with the Padma Bhushan, the Padma Shri, and other
international accolades. In a long and illustrious career spanning over seven decades, Dr Doshi has completed more than 100 projects,
many of which are iconic public institutions that include IIM Bangalore, IIM Udaipur, the National Institute of Fashion Technology,
New Delhi, the Tagore Memorial Hall in Ahmedabad, the IFFCO Township of Kalol, and Amdavad di Gufa. Email: vsf@sangath.org
Wide panoramic view of Mumbai city
T
overburdening the mega-cities– which will eventually get
crushed under their own burden of management, complexity,
and affordability. Expansion means larger distances, and
more time and energy to commute for living, working, or
cultivating the mind and the spirit.
Expanding mega-cities today can only afford to sell
branded and mass-produced goods to greater numbers,
which needs larger centralised production centres, industrial
complexes, the greater network of transport facilities, large
When we see the map of India, we realise a unique characteristic – there is a hierarchical network
of dots of varied sizes with names of large metropolises, cities, and towns. They appear like
‘urban galaxies’ – with naturally developed scales between entities, interconnected and located
within easy reach. Further exploration suggests that these networks have their unique lifestyles,
unique pattern of habitat based on local resources, climate, and available characteristics of
land. The connections and the spread of the developments appear like a ‘biological’ growth, with
adaptation, mutation and replication after a certain growth tipping point that are essential for
sustenance and preservation. These multi-nodal conglomerates expand infinitely absorbing
smaller entities on the way and obliterating their strengths.
URBAN PLANNING
SPEcIAL ARTIcLE
Read More