Not all is worthy of the bin! Our latest column in The Hindu explores features of Indian urbanism that could inspire cities around the world. (The Hindu 24.09.2017)
Creating a network of local and international actors to learn from Ulleung-do’s natural heritage while living in it.
Transcript of interview in the Hindustan Times.
The future in architecture starts with a good hard look at the world as it is.
Every kaccha house transforming into a pukka house is a story worth telling – one which is extremely significant to residents and the development of the city at large.
Dry hard data on circulatory migration in India hides vibrant, lively stories.
The biggest growth in urbanisation is not taking place in the metropolis but in small towns that are networked with villages.
Conceptualised by designers in collaboration with users and local artisans, the Handstorm workshop takes objects used in everyday life and gives them a spin to be more functional to the users.
Housing must be seen as a process rather than a product: its values lie in the relationship and inter-action between the actors, their activities and the produced house.
What does the mutation of colonial Bombay into global Mumbai mean for architectural forms and public life?