Friday, April 06, 2007

the house baker didnt build

That would be my house, for one. I mean I can not hope that the house I can afford one day will be designed by Laurie Baker as he passed away on april first.

I first read about Baker when I was 13 or 14 in one of the supplements of times of India and in an article written by cartoonist Abu Abraham if I remember correctly. This article was called- the house baker built- or something like that. its with me still, somewhere among my newspaper cuttings, it was probably the earliest of the collection, a practice which was then pleasure but now is a professional requirement. The writer spoke about his home which Laurie Baker had designed. At one point he says how a room had been so designed as to avoid cutting down a jackfruit tree, and the area around the tree was further made into a small sitting space in the open. He also mentioned that Baker had once designed a house on top of a hill facing the sea. I think it was that line which decided it for me. I had always wanted that exact same kind of location for a house of my own. And had figured that it would mean somewhere along the coastline of India, and preferably the western coast. Years later the Himalayas caught my fascination and became the preferred location for the dream house (though I still moaned about not having the sea side). Ya ya, this is a great deal of wishful thinking but whats wrong with that? But whatever be the spatial location of my dream, I always hoped it would be made on the principles of architecture that Baker’s life and work represented.

You would think all this sounds pretentious, but i dont think Baker would have minded. For Baker was a Gandhian, it seems he considered his chance meeting with Gandhi as the one which changed his life. He is one more instance of the exciting possibilities within Gandhi's thought. He specialised in low cost housing which was simple, functional as well as aesthetic . Most importantly it used locally available material, and avoided as much as possible cement and steel. His buildings blended into the surroundings, and were sensitive to local ecology. He wouldn’t chop trees, remove rocks or flatten a slope but incorporate them all into the structure. I just read that he described his own house as a blanket draped over a hillock. Wow. I have never been in a Baker home, I have only seen pictures. But I do think that a great deal of traditional architecture does make immense sense in terms of weather and ecology.

Baker died on April 1st. Perhaps it is a way of alerting us to the joke that we have made of our homes and built spaces in the race to become the country with the most malls, the most ugly and energy guzzling buildings.

2 comments:

rama srinivasan said...

hey there r still some baker disciples left. they may design ur house

Minerva said...

"designed a house on top of a hill facing the sea" - oh my GOD!! I want a house there..:)