Unit 1 - 2
Unit 1 - 2
Unit 1 - 2
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• ORIGIN
– PALEOLITHIC- Old Stone age
– MESOLITHIC - End of
Stone Age
– NEOLITHIC – development
– of farms
– CHIEFDOMS - Jamindars
– FIRST VILLAGE and TRADE TOWNS
– GLOBAL TOWNS
Ar.Manika
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Origin of towns
Topography Function
• Ancient Towns
• Medieval Towns
• Renaissance City
• Baroque City
• Industrial Age
• Modern City Planning
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ANCIENT TOWNS
• Unplanned organic development
• River bank
• Topography of the site directly related to city
form
• Limited building material
• Small street (only foot traffic)
• Houses open directly to street
• No fortification – small walls (mud/wood)
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MEDIEVAL TOWNS 5th – 15 AD
• Origin of religion
• Religious building dominate the settlement
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MEDIEVAL TOWNS
• Church plaza become center of activity
(market)
• Main road leads to church/castel
• Cities were located on irregular terrain, hill top
and island
• Castel/town surrounded by fortification (wall
and moat)
• Wheel traffic only on main road
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MEDIEVAL TOWNS
• Built to support present population
• Confined to wall – no space for future growth
• Density started to increase as the town grows
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RENAISSANCE 14 – 17 AD
• Religion become important
• Central open space for community activity
• Trade- colonization- wealth
• Ornamentation of buildings
• Main road – commercial
• Gap between rich and poor increases
• New style of fortification both attack and
defense. (space for artilleries, wider wall)
• New inventions- gun powder, press, etc.
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RENAISSANCE 14 – 17 AD
• New town
– Palaces dominate the skyline, Versailles France
• Old town
– Plazas were given importance, st peters Rome
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BAROQUE CITY 17 AD
• Geometry, axis were
seen on planning
• Axial planning-
– king louis XIV palace of
versailles
• Wide street- Foot and
horse carriage
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BAROQUE CITY 17 AD
• Paris redevelopment by Haussmann
• Features- Avenues, Fountain, Axis and
Geometry
• New street form- Boulevard
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INDUSTRIAL AGE – 19 AD
• Mass production
• Workers in great number drawn together- city
center
• High density- lack of open space
• Unplanned and undirected growth
• Blight and slum started to appear within the city
• Wider street- foot- horse carriage- cars
• Housed were built to accommodate most no of
people- Tenements
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INDUSTRIAL AGE – 19 AD
• Good
– Mass production
– New building materials
– Job opportunities
• Issues
– Over crowding
– Unplanned growth
– Slum
– Traffic
– pollution
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MODERN TOWN PLANNING CONCEPTS
• 1890-1900- city beautification
• 1898- garden city
• 1880-1920 – settlement movement
• 1950- structuralism (CIAM)
• 1980- new urbanism
• 1990- smart growth
• 2000- TOD - transit-oriented development
• 2010- critical urbanism - The practice of long
term master-planning
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ANCIENT SYSTEM OF TOWN PLANNING IN INDIA
TOPICS TO BE COVERED
• INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
– MOHENJADORO
– HARAPPA
• EXTRACTS FROM CHANAKYA S’ ARTHASASTRA
– REGIONAL CONCEPTS
– MANASARA VASTU SASTRA
• 8 TOWN PLANNING CONCEPTS
INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
• Also referred
to as
HARAPPAN
CIVILIZATION
HARAPPA &
SARASWATHI
SINDHU
CIVILIZATION
MOHENJODARO
• Between
INDUS RIVER
AND THE
GHAGGAR‐
HAKRA RIVER
[Pakistan and
North
Western
India]
INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
DEVELOPMENT OF CITIES
• CITIES GREW OUT OF EARLIER VILLAGES THAT
EXISTED IN THE SAME LOCALITY FOR < 100 YRS
• GREW IN SIZE & DENSITY AND SURROUNDED BY
NUMEROUS TOWNS & VILLAGES
• CITIES INTERLINKED BY TRADE & ECONOMIC
ACTIVITIES, RELEGIOUS BELIEFS, SOCIAL
RELATIONS,ETC
• VAST AGRICULTURAL LANDS, RIVERS & FORESTS
BY PASTORAL COMMUNITIES , FISHER FOLK AND
HUNTERS SURROUNDED EACH CITY
INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
DEVELOPMENT OF CITIES
• CLASSIFICATION OF TOWNS
– Small villages / hamlets – 0 – 10 hectares
– Large towns – 10‐ 50 hectares
– Cities – 50 hectares
• IMPORTANT CITIES
CITY SIZE IN HECTARES POPULATION
MOHENJODARO 200 35‐41000
HARAPPA 150 23500
GANWERIWALA 80
RAKHIGARHI 80
DHOLAVIRA 100
REHMAN DEHRI 22 12000
MOHENJODARO
• NO FORTIFICATION
• MAJOR STREETS IN
NORTH SOUTH
DIRECTION
• INTERSECTION AT
RIGHT ANGLES
• STREETS WITHIN
BUILT UP AREAS
WERE NARROW
• DISTINCT ZONING
FOR DIFFERENT
GROUPS
MOHENJODARO
SETTLEMENT
DIVISIONS
RELEGIOUS,
INSTITUTIONAL &
CULTURAL AREAS –
AROUND
MONASTERY &
GREAT BATH IN THE
WESTERN PART
NORTH –
AGRICULTURE &
INDUSTRIES
SOUTH –
ADMINISTRATION,
TRADE &
COMMERCE
MOHENJODARO
CONSTRUCTION TECHNIQUES
• BUILDINGS – MASONRY CONSTRUCTION BYSUN DRIED BRICKS
• RANGING FROM 2 ROOMS TOMANSIONS WITH MANY ROOMS
• UNDERGROUND SEWERAGE & DRAINAGE FROM HOUSES
• HELICAL PUMPS FOR PUMPING WATER IN GREAT BATH
• PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS – MONASTRY & BATH ‐
INDICATING RELIGIOUSCULTURE
MOHENJODARO
• 12x7x3 M IN DIMENSIONS GREAT BATH
• EARLIEST PUBLIC WATER TANK IN
ANCIENT WORLD
• LEDGE EXTENDS FOR THE ENTIRE WIDTH
OF POOL
• WATERTIGHT FLOOR – THICK LAYER OF
BITUMEN
• FLOOR SLOPES IN SOUTH WEST CORNER
WITH A SMALL OUTLET CONNECTING TO A
BRICK DRAIN
• ROOMS LOCATED IN THEEAST
MOHENJODARO
GRANARY
• 50x40 M IN DIMENSION, 4.5 M TALL
• MASSIVE MUD BRICK FOUNDATION
• 2 ROWS OF SIX ROOMS ALONG A CENTRAL PASSAGEWAY [7M WIDE
& PAVED WITH BAKED BRICKS]
• EACH ROOM 15.2x6.1 M HAS 3 STEEPER WALLS WITH AIRSPACE
BETWEEN
• A WOODEN SUPERSTRUCTURE SUPPORTED IN SOME PLACES BY
LARGE COLUMNS WOULD HAVE BEEN BUILT ON TOP OF THE BRICK
FOUNDATIONS, WITH STAIRS LEADING UP FROM THE CENTRAL
PASSAGE AREA.
• SMALL TRIANGULAR OPENIGS – AIR DUCTS FOR FRESH AIR
BENEATH HOLLOW FLOORS
• THE LARGE SIZE OF THE GRANARY PROBABLY INDICATES A HIGHLY
DEVELOPED AGRICULTURAL CIVILIZATION
HARAPPA
• 23000 POPULATION
• 150 HECTARES
• EARLIEST CITY MAY HAVE BEEN FORMED
2800‐
DURING THE KOT DIJI PHASE, I.E.,
2500 BC
• 25 HA.
EARLIEST CITY COVERED AN AREA OF
DRAINAGE SYSTEM
• BATHING PLATFORMS WITH WATER TIGHT FLOOR & DRAINS [OPEN
OUT TO LARGER DRAINS IN STREETS ] PROVIDED IN ROOMS ADJACENT TO
THE WELLS.
• DRAINS AND WATER CHUTES IN THE UPPER STOREYS WERE OFTEN
BUILT INSIDE THE WALL WITH AN EXIT OPENING JUST ABOVE THE STREET
DRAINS.
• TAPERED TERRACOTTA DRAINPIPES WERE USED TO DIRECT WATER
OUT TO THE STREET.
• MANY HOUSES HAD DISTINCT TOILETS, SEPARATE FROM THE BATH
AREAS.
• COMMODES WERE LARGE JARS OR SUMP POTS SUNK INTO THE
FLOORS AND MANY OF THEM CONTAINED A SMALL JAR.
• DRAINS COVERED WITH BAKED BRICKS OR DRESSED STONE BLOCKS.
GARBAGE BINS WERE PROVIDED ALONG THE MAJOR STREETS.
REGIONAL CONSIDERATION
CHANAKYA’S ARTHASASTHRA
• NEW VILLAGE –
– HIGHER PROPORTION OF AGRICULTURISTS AND SHUDRAS.
– MARKET ‐ SALE OF GOODS RECEIVED FROM TRADERS ON HIGHWAYS.
– DAMS ‐ CONSTRUCTED OVER RIVERS NALAS.
– TEMPLES AND GARDENS SHOULD BE PROVIDED.
– ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE AGED, THE CHILDREN AND INFORMAL PERSONS.
– CEREALS AND WEALTH WILL GROW IF THE AGRICULTURISTS ARE KEPT BUSY. ATTEMPTS SHOULD BE MADE TO PROTECT
AND INCREASE QUARRIES, FORESTS AND CANALS.
TOWN PLANNING
CHANAKYA’S ARTHASASTHRA
• A CITY ‐ LOCATED CENTRALLY TO FACILITATE TRADE AND
COMMERCE.
• THE SITE ‐ LARGE IN AREA, AND NEAR A PERENNIAL
DEPRESSED
WATER BODY .
CLASS
• SHAPE ‐ CIRCULAR, RECTANGULAR OR
FOREST,
SQUARE AS WOULD SUIT THE TOPOGRAPHY.
CEMETRIE FOREST
• SEPARATE AREAS FOR MARKETING DIFFERENT S GOODS
GOODS.
• WALL AROUND THE TOWN, ‐ 6 DANDAS HIGH AND TRADERS /
12 DANDAS WIDE. BEYOND THIS WALL THERE SHOULD PALA CE & SKILLED
BE THREE MOATS OF 14‘, 12’AND 10’ WIDE TO TEMPLES WORKERS
BE CONSTRUCTED FOUR ARM‐LENGTHS APART. DEPTH –
KSHATRIYAS
3/4TH OF WIDTH.
• THREE‐EAST WEST AND THREE NORTH –
PRIEST &
SOUTH ROADS, SHOULD DIVIDE THE TOWN. TREASURY /
MINISTER
GOLDSMITH
• THE MAIN ROADS SHOULD BE 8 DANDAS WIDE AND /S INDUSTRIES S
OTHER ROADS 4 DANDAS WIDE. / DOCTORS,/
ARTISTS
• 1 WELL FOR 10 HOUSES.
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
• Dandaka
• Sarvathobhadra
• Nandyavarta
• Padmaka
• Swastika
• Prastara
• Karmuka
• Chaturmukha
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
Dandaka
• STREETS ARE STRAIGHT AND CROSS EACH
OTHER AT RIGHT ANGLES AT THE CENTRE
• VILLAGE HAS 4 GATES ON FOUR SIDES
• VILLAGE IS RECTANGULAR / SQUARE
• WIDTH OF THE STREET VARIES FROM ONE ‐
FIVE DANDA
• 2 TRANSVERSE STREET AT THE EXTREMITIES
HAVE SINGLE ROW OF HOUSES
• THE VILLAGE OFFICES LOCATED IN THE EAST.
• THE FEMALE DEITY/ CHAMADEVATA ‐
LOCATED OUTSIDE THE VILLAGE AND THE
MALE DEITIES IN THE NORTHERN PORTION
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
SARVATOBHADRA
• This type of town plan is
applicable to larger villages and
towns, which have to be
constructed on a square sites.
• According to this plan, the
whole town should be fully
occupied by houses of various
descriptions and inhabited by
all classes of people.
• The temple dominates the
village
ANCIENT TOWN
CLASSIFICATION
NANDYAVARTA
• This plan is commonly used
for the construction of towns
and not for villages.
• It is generally adopted for the
sites either circular or square
in shape, 3000 – 4000
HOUSES
• The streets run parallel to the
central adjoining streets with
the temple of the presiding
deity in the center of the
town.
• “Nandyavarta” is the name of
a flower, the form of which is
followed in this layout.
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
PADMAKA
• This type of plan was
practiced for building of the
towns with fortress allround.
• The pattern of the plan
resembles the petals of lotus
radiating outwards from the
cente .
• The city used to be practically
an island surrounded by
water, having no scope for
expansion
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
SWASTIKA
• Swastika type of plan
contemplates some diagonal
streets dividing the site into
certain rectangular plots.
• The site need not be marked out
into a square or rectangle and it
may be of any shape.
• A rampart wall surrounds the
town, with a moat at its foot
filled with water.
• Two main streets cross each
other at the center, running south
to north and west toeast.
ANCIENT TOWN CLASSIFICATION
PRASTARA
• The characteristic feature of this
plan is that the site may be
either square or rectangular but
not triangular or circular.
• The sites are set apart for the
poor, the middle class, the rich
and the very rich, the sizes of the
sites increasing according to the
capacity of each to purchase or
build upon.
• The main roads are much wider
compared to those of other
patterns.
• The town may or may not be
surrounded by a fort.
ANCIENT TOWN
CLASSIFICATION
KARMUKA
• This plan is suitable for the place where the site of the town
is in the form of a bow or semi‐circular or parabolic and
mostly applied for towns located on the seashore or
riverbanks.
• The main streets of the town run from north to south or east
to west and the cross streets run at right‐angles to them,
dividing the whole area intoblocks.
• The presiding deity, commonly a female deity, is installed in
the temple build in any convenient place.
ANCIENT TOWN
CLASSIFICATION
CHATURMUKHA
• Chaturmukha type of plan
is applicable to all towns
starting from the largest
town to the smallest
village.
• The site may be either
square or rectangular
having four faces.
• The town is laid out east to
west lengthwise, with four
main streets.
• The temple of the presiding
deity will be always at the
center
SETTLEMENT
SIZE
HIERARCHIES
• 1 TIERED
• 2 TIRED
• 3 TIERED
• 4 TIRED
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• 1 TIERED
– Isolated village
• 2 TIRED
– Mandi Towns
• 3 TIERED
– City (District Head)
• 4 TIRED
– Metropolitan city
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Satellite 55
EVERY AGE IS DEFINED BY ITS
INNOVATION
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CLASSIFICATION OF SETTLEMENTS
• POPULATION
• LOCATION
• FUNCTION
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POPULATION
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POPULATION
Settlement type Population Distance apart Service available
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POPULATION
Settlement type Population Distance apart Service available
Primate city- often the Several million Dependent on the needs of Cathedrals, government
capital city the country buildings, international air,
bus and rail termini,
financial headquarters,
specialist hospitals,
museums, opera houses,
theatres, several
universities, main shopping
centers, tourist centers.
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POPULATION
TYPOLOGY POPULATION
CLASS I ABOVE 1 LAKH
CLASS II 50,000 – 99,000
CLASS III 20,000 – 49,000
CLASS IV 10,000 – 19,000
CLASS V 5,000 – 9,000
CLASS VI LESS THAN 5000
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LOCATION
• VALLEY SECTION MODEL
• PATRIC GEDDES
• Interactions among biogeography, geomorphology
and human systems
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LOCATION
• Settlement on hills
• Coastal settlements
• Forests
• Deserts
• Along rivers
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FUNCTION
• RESIDENTIAL
• ADMINISTRATIVE
• INDUSTRIAL
• DEFENSE
• COMMERCIAL
• MARKET
• PORT
• CULTURAL
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ADMINISTRATIVE
• WASHINGTON DC
L'Enfant Plan
A Hakka walled village is a large multi-family communal living structure that is designed
to be easily defensible.
Round in shape and internally divided into many compartments for food storage, living
quarters, ancestral temple, armoury etc. The largest houses covered over 40,000 m².
DEFENCE SETTLEMENT
MARKET/MANDI
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PORT
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CULTURAL
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FACTORS INFLUENCING THE
TYPE OF SETTLEMENTS
•Physical Factors: These include relief, altitude, soil capability, climate,
drainage, ground water level, etc. These factors influence the type and
spacing of dwelling or instance, in dry regions of Rajasthan, water is a crucial
factor and, therefore, houses are situated along a pond or well which guides
the compactness of the settlement.
•Ethnic and Cultural Factors: These include aspects like caste, community,
ethnicity and religion. In India it is commonly found that the main land
owning caste resides at the centre of the village and the other service
providing castes on the periphery. This leads to social segregation and
fragmentation of a settlement into several units
•Historical or Defence Factors: In the past, mostly border areas of north-
western plains were conquered or attacked frequently by outsiders. For a
long time, apart from attack from outsiders, there had been continuous fight
between princely states and kingdom within the country therefore, security
concerns favoured the evolution of nucleated settlements.
URBAN SETTLEMENTS