18TH CENTURY URBANIZATION IN SOUTH INDIA AND TRANSFORMATION INTO BRITISH IMPERIAL ARCHITECTURE WITH SPECIAL FOCUS ON URBAN SPACES OF BANGALORE

The colonial structures that still stand today in India are the product of careful fabrication of British thought. The British government was afraid of what kind of legacy they would leave behind when exiting India in 1947. Today, years after the independence of India, one is still able to see such a legacy in stone: the colonial architecture and cities that are still in existence. The styles of architecture employed by the British Raj were systematically chosen, dependent on the location and utilization of a given city. The British were trying to consecrate their power through architectural representation. Trying to legitimize British rule, architects wanted to tie the architecture of the British with former Indian rulers, yet still create an effect of British grandeur. The examples illustrate that location and utilization were indeed crucial determinants of colonial style.


IDENTITY THROUGH ARCHITECTURE
British presence in India was focused in the major port cities that revolved around trade. Of these major areas include Madras, Calcutta, and Bombay. It is an incorrect assumption to state that no architecture was built in India during these early years of British presence; however, still one is able to see that the intentions for the architecture were drastically different when compared to those structures built under the formation of the British Raj. Structures and major planning was restricted to these areas, and were produced out of necessity as opposed to presenting a British ideal. This ideal Thomas Metcalf describes as including the national identity of the British.
i The British constructed an image of themselves during the eighteenth century that presented them as distinct, special, and superior to those colonial areas where they felt they had the right to rule. Buildings used for housing and trade posts were construed by them as little else was needed by the East India Trading Company to continue with their profitable pursuits. These structures, labeled "factories", contained storehouses, barracks, a director"s house, and other accommodations found necessary by the British ii . In terms of stylistic preference, these first buildings were created more within European conventions of styles: classical, Greek, and gothic were of the major styles chosen iii . British were in a hurry to build although little thought was given to the message that would be conveyed by these styles of architecture, still, using strictly European styles of architecture would present a group of people an identity in terms of racial, social and economic differences.

BRITISH URBAN DESIGN POLICY
The planning and urban design policies of the British followed certain principles - Haussmann"s plan for Paris which had become so popular in Europe and which advocated cutting through and demolishing old city centers to make space for new construction.

MILITARY ARCHITECTURE UNDER THE BRITISH
The Cantonment was a British military settlement which was to spread out all over India Wherever; the British were present in sizable numbers. Originally conceived as a military base for British troops the cantonment also began to house civilians, who were associated with servicing the military, and developed into a full-fledged mini-city of its own. The second half of the 19th century saw this complete transformation. Bangalore cantonment had, for example, a population of 100,000 by the early 20th century and consisted of public offices, churches, parks, shops and schools. It was an entity distinct from the old citytraffic between the two had to stop at a toll-gate and pay entry tax. The cantonment thus developed into a European town in India.

THE BANGALORE CONTONMENT
The heart of the Bangalore Cantonment was the Parade Ground. The Civil and Military Station (CMS) grew around the Parade Ground. Bangalore rapidly became the largest cities such the capital of the Kingdom of Mysore was moved from Mysore city to Bangalore. The Bangalore Cantonment grew independent of its twin-city, referred to as Bangalore pete , Bangalore Cantonment, had a colonial design with a population that consisted of residents from other parts of India and Great Britain In the 19th century, the Bangalore Cantonment had clubs, churches, Bungalows, shops and cinemas. The Bangalore Cantonment had a strong European influence with public residence and life centered around the South Parade, The area around the South Parade was famous for its bars and restaurants with the area known as Blackpally The Cubbon Park was built in the Bangalore Cantonment in 1864 on 120 acres of land. The main the effort was to physically and socially separate the Europeans from the indigenous populacethe so-called "White" and "Black" towns. This being done with an effort at Bangalore, though sometimes belated, was also made to enforce sanitary and developmental guidelines on the old town, though these had little effect as in the main they failed to take into account traditional ways of community life.
The economic boom of the later half of the 19th century translated into frenetic building activity in British India. The application of urban design guidelines resulted in the unified character that old British settlements in India still possess. These urban design projects could not fail to be influenced by precedents in Britain. As pressure on space grew, British architecture progressed from single buildings set in open surrounding to more densely packed urban schemes, as in the cities of Calcutta and Bombay.
In addition to major urban design schemes, it was the civil lines and the cantonments which remain today a major evidence of 18th century British presence, and which in turn have influenced much middle-class housing development in modern India. This stems from their perception as the colonies of the elite. The cantonments and civil lines both were generally laid out as grid iron planned communities with central thoroughfares , with tree-lined streets called avenues , regularly divided building plots and bungalows as the main housing type. Churches and cemeteries, clubs, race and golf courses, and other trappings of an easy civil life were soon to follow. iv

THE SACRED ARCHITECTURE
Celebrating the church architecture throughout the British Raj including South India for soldier, trader and administrator, the church was at the very core of British colonial life and it represented the spiritual bond between the British colonial and his God. The architecture of the church buildings reflected the changing ecclesiastical modes throughout those times of Raj; from the earlier Gothic to Neo Classical Revival style so favored by the Victorians -the most prolific of empirebuilders-to the churches of the early 19th century.
Dotted throughout the sub-continent, these old, often beautiful buildings carry the weight of a now forgotten history in their architecture, detailed interiors and old brass plaques. They remain fascinating and evocative places to visit and these buildings continue to provide a cool refuge for the weary traveller v .

FEATURES OF CHURCH ARCHITECTURE IN COLONIAL INDIA
Gothic buildings had thinner walls, larger windows, pointed arches and large buttresses. Before the 20th century, the landmarks building in almost every town was a church, cathedral, abbey, or town-hall with its tall tower or spire rising high above all the houses. The ground plan of most Gothic-churches is shaped like a cross. The long nave makes the body of the church and, crossing it, the arms are called the transept. On the other side of the transept is the chancel which is often called the choir because that is where the priest and the choir sing the services.
The nave usually has a passageway or aisle on either side. Sometimes there are two aisles on each side. The nave is usually a lot taller than the aisles, and has high windows which light up the central space. The upper part of the building, where these windows are, is called the clerestory (or clear storey).

PUBLIC STRUCTURES
For the purposes of government buildings, something more assertive was needed to proclaim the supremacy of the British. It is thus that Government Houses and Town Halls, from where the business of governance and justice was carried out, follow closely changing trends in Britain to a great extent, and show also the continued influence of the so-called "pattern books", from which the bulk of the Company"s design was carried out. These pattern books, while conforming more or less to Europe"s Greco-Roman heritage, incorporated ideas on the form architecture "should" take, depending on its function. In essence, a pattern book would show how to put together different elements and combine them into a building. However, principles of urban design were applied here, stemming from its position in the last decades of the 18th century as the hallmark of authority.
As the British consolidated their rule in Bangalore and their building needs grew, there was a debate as to which style of architecture should be followed. The final outcome was an amalgamation of architectural elements from both India and Europe. Within the colonial style of architecture there was difference between public buildings. While Public offices such as the Attara Katcheri were representations of colonial power, the residential buildings were designed bearing in mind the climatic conditions and the wishes of the residents to create houses that resembled their homes in Britain. This need was best satisfied by the "Bungalow" type.
The Bungalow type, which developed in India and later spread to Australia and Africa, was derived from the detached rural Bengal house placed in a compound and the British suburban villa. The initial bungalows were same as the kutcha local ones but later became elaborate in design. From the basic plan of the main central room and the curvilinear thatching of the roof over, it got upgraded to the sloping titled roof and the verandah and side rooms. The elementary plan of the bungalow was the porch, the verandah, the drawing and dining rooms with bedrooms on the sides and the service annexes in the rear yard. The building was situated in the middle of a compound, which had a garden of roses, fernery etc which were psychological references to British homes.
The architectural style of bungalows went through 2 distinct phases namely the earlier classical phase and the later gothic phase. This was unlike public architecture in which the gothic phase was followed by the classical phase. Long low classical lines and details characterized the early phase of bungalows, while later the bungalows had an additional floor with multi-planned gabled roofs and monkey tops with a profusion of ornamentation. In Bangalore, bungalows played a role in establishing social and psychological boundaries between the British and the Indians. The tall imposing gates and the long drive to the porch and the spacious verandah leading to the drawing room, which were the ideals of a residential building, were also symbols of the insularity of the residents from the "natives". The features of a Bungalow such as thick walls and high ceilings were on one hand adaptations to the Indian weather while on the other hand acted as a boundary from the locals. Similarly the inner courtyard of a traditional Indian house was replaced by the hall, which helped in segregating the servants from the family members. The amount of land used for the bungalow was also socially dictated. For example for a senior officer the area of the garden would be fifteen times the size of the house, while for a low ranking officer it might be a ration of 1:1.
Therefore the Bungalow and the space it occupied became a tool to not only assert the social and cultural superiority of the British over the Indians, but also to establish a hierarchy between the British officials. In other words, the Bungalow was an architectural entity shaped by an ideology of hierarchy, power and control.

ROYAL ARCHITECTURE
The   The design of the town and city involves the meticulous hand of the Master planner who must be both an artist and a technician. A qualified town planner does not necessarily make a good town designer. He may have a lot of ideas and sound theories to put into practice but he will need the sensitivity of the artist to make his planning concept emerge as a praiseworthy physical entity. The beautiful city is a visual experience which requires concerted efforts to reconcile the intrinsic quality of the terrain onto the two-dimensional plan that take into considerations breathtaking vistas. Exquisite natural vegetations and other element of surprises that can put the beholder into a state of awe. It is also widely believed that Mother Earth has an inborn spirituality that guides its future destiny governed by her relationship with the Cosmos. The 'genii loci' which means the spirit of the place in Latin will inevitably determine the future success or otherwise of the city based on its original sitting.