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Charles Correa
Indian architect

Charles Correa

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Indian architect
Known for
Parumala Church, Portuguese Church
A.K.A.
Charles Mark Correa
From
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Hyderabad, India
Place of death
Mumbai, India
Age
84 years
Charles Correa
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Charles Mark Correa (1 September 1930 – 16 June 2015) was an Indian architect and urban planner. Credited for the creation of modern architecture in post-Independent India, he was celebrated for his sensitivity to the needs of the urban poor and for his use of traditional methods and materials.

Biography

Charles Correa, a Roman Catholic of Goan descent, was born on 1 September 1930 in Secunderabad. He began his higher studies at St. Xavier's College, Mumbai. He went on to study at the University of Michigan (1949–53) where Buckminster Fuller was a teacher, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1953–55) where he obtained his master's degree.

In 1958, Charles Correa established his own professional practice in Mumbai. His first significant project was the Mahatma Gandhi Sangrahalaya (Mahatma Gandhi Memorial) at Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad (1958–1963), followed by the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly in Bhopal (1967). In 1961-1966, he designed his first high-rise building, the Sonmarg apartments in Mumbai. On the National Crafts Museum in New Delhi (1975–1990), he introduced "the rooms open to the sky", his systematic use of courtyards. In the Jawahar Kala Kendra (Jawahar Arts Centre) in Jaipur (1986–1992), he makes a structural hommage to Jai Singh II. Later, he invited the British artist Howard Hodgkin for the outside design of the British Council in Delhi (1987–1992).

From 1970–75, Charles Correa was Chief Architect for New Bombay (Navi Mumbai), where he was strongly involved in extensive urban planning of the new city. In 1984, Charles Correa founded the Urban Design Research Institute in Bombay, dedicated to the protection of the built environment and improvement of urban communities. During the final four decades of his life, Correa has done pioneering work in urban issues and low-cost shelter in the Third World. In 1985, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi appointed him Chairman of the National Commission on Urbanization.

From 2005 until his 2008 resignation Correa was the Chairman of the Delhi Urban Arts Commission.

Later, Charles Correa designed the new Ismaili Centre in Toronto, Canada, which shared the site with the Aga Khan Museum designed by Fumihiko Maki, and the Champalimaud Foundation Centre in Lisbon, inaugurated by the Portuguese President Cavaco Silva on 5 October 2010.

He died on 16 June 2015 in Mumbai following a brief illness.

Work

Style

Charles Correa designed almost 100 buildings in India, from low-income housing to luxury condos. He rejected the glass-and-steel approach of some post-modernist buildings, and focused on designs deeply rooted in local cultures, allthewhile providing modern structural solutions under his creative designs. His style was also focused on reintroducing outdoor spaces and terraces.

His work is the physical manifestation of the idea of Indian nationhood, modernity and progress. His vision sits at the nexus defining the contemporary Indian sensibility and it articulates a new Indian identity with a language that has a global resonance. He is someone who has that rare capacity to give physical form to something as intangible as ‘culture’ or ‘society’ – and his work is therefore critical: aesthetically; sociologically; and culturally.

— British architect David Adjaye in 2013.

In 2013, the Royal Institute of British Architects held a retrospective exhibition, "Charles Correa – India's Greatest Architect", about the influences of his work on modern urban Indian architecture.

Projects

PhotoDateNameLocationNotes
1961-1962Tube HouseAhmedabaddemolished
1961-1966Sonmarg apartmentsMumbai
R&D facility of Mahindra & Mahindra LtdMahindra Research Valley, Chennai
1980-1997Vidhan Bhavan
2004City centerSalt Lake City, Kolkata

Awards

  • 1972: Padma Shri
  • 1984: Royal Gold Medal for architecture by the Royal Institute of British Architects.
  • 1994: Praemium Imperiale
  • 1998: 7th Aga Khan Award for Architecture for Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly
  • 2005: Austrian Decoration for Science and Art
  • 2006: Padma Vibhushan given by Government of India

Publications

  • Charles Correa, The New Landscape, RIBA Enterprises, December 1985, (ISBN 978-0947877217)

Personal life

Charles Correa married Monika (née Sequeira), an artist, in 1961. Together they lived in one of the flats of the Sonmarg apartments in Mumbai. They had two children.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 27 Dec 2019. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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