Silent Stories of a City
Houses hold stories in their walls – of family meals,
getting home work done, friends visiting, scribbles on the walls, and the
inevitable quarrels. There is a great sense of loss as buildings are pulled
down. It is as if lives are sent to some no man’s land, to exist as shadows,
soon to be dismissed as fanciful imagination.
Watching homes tumble like flimsy cardboard structures in
the recent flash floods across the world was a shocking reminder of the
vulnerability of man’s claim on the earth. Family albums, carefully collected
furniture and favourite clothes are turned into muddy rubble. Wars and natural
disasters are seen as forces beyond the control of people. Some homes are
abandoned as families disperse, some are erased by developers who only see
property value instead of cherished homes.
Karachi’s streets are being stripped of their history.
Karachi was the Dubai of the late 19th century, for the most part,
bare sandy tracts upon which architects, supported by local Silawat builders,
could experiment with architectural styles - Venetian Gothic, Indo Saracenic,
Art Deco and later on, 60’s modernism.
Walking or driving
through the inner city of Karachi, exquisite buildings of the past are sandwiched
between thoughtlessly constructed concrete buildings. Yet one’s eyes are
transfixed to these quiet sentinels of a graceful past. Who stood in their
balconies, their spacious verandas, climbed their teak staircases? What did they view on the streets below?
What was Jayashankar Madhawji’s life like in the house
designed by M. Nazareth on plot No 34 and 34/ A, in Market Quarter? Or that of Noorbhoy Jafferji who lived up the
road at No 81 in a house designed by Jamsedji P. Mistry? What parties were held
in the beautiful residence on 82 Bunder Road with its romantic grapevine
carvings?
While the buildings fall like ninepins under the demolition
squad, the streets still bear witness to Karachi’s eclectic population. In just
one area of Ranchore Lines, Solomon David Road, Ali Budha Street, Shivdas
Street, Vishan Das Street, Mir Ayub Khan Road and Kalyan Jee Street are bounded
by Nabi Bux Road and Barnes Street.
Cities are always changing and
growing, facing increasing pressure to provide new housing and business
centres. While Karachi’s town planners develop layouts of streets and zoning,
and the Building Control Authority are tasked to ensure the engineering
soundness and space usage of new constructions, there seems to be no attention
paid to the aesthetic integration of the old and the new.
Developers, calculator in hand,
are determined to ensure the maximum sellable covered area, arriving at box
like structures built with the cheapest materials in the shortest possible
time. There is no room for the graceful arched verandas of Mohatta Goods Godown
on Mission Road, or the exquisite detailing of the Mohammad Ali Building in
Moosa Lane.
It is not simply nostalgia for the
past. A study by environmental psychologist, Colin Ellard, revealed that
monolithic, dull facades found on modern skyscrapers and apartment blocks were
found to cause stress to passers-by and inhabitants. These are not buildings
that encourage intimacy, a sense of belonging and pride. The anonymous sameness
devalues inhabitants, who scurry up and down dark uneven stairs to get to their
box like offices or homes.
Preservation and revitalization of
heritage localities plays a large part in cultural resilience. It is a way of
being cradled by previous generations and an inspiration to carry the story
forward.
Trader Seth Bhojomal saw Karachi’s
potential in 1729 and the East India administrator, Charles Napier, believed it
could be the Star of the East. Mayor Jamshed Nusserwanji Mehta ensured it
became the cleanest city of Asia.
The old city, approximately 50 sq
km, a fraction of the larger 3,780 sq km area of Karachi, is waiting for loving
attention. Many organisations and individuals have done their best to highlight
and protect Karachi’s heritage. NED university’s Heritage Cell, Arch Arif
Hasan, Yasmin Lari’s Heritage Foundation, Arch.Marvi Mazhar, heritage walkers
Shaheen Nauman, Jehanzeb of Super Savari Express, Farooq Soomro, the Karachi
Walla, countless researchers and photographers have worked tirelessly to
protect the 1700 declared heritage buildings. The Sindh Cultural Heritage
Preservation Act was passed in 1994. Yet they all seem helpless before the
juggernaut of developers and land mafia.
A new directive has been issued by the Chief Minister of
Sindh to assess the condition of listed buildings in the city. There is no
conversation about setting up engineering teams to specialize in their restoration
instead of delisting and demolishment. European heritage buildings destroyed
during WWII were reconstructed from existing plans. Today new technologies like
Lidar scanning can document heritage buildings in great detail, and pave the
way for the true preservation of Karachi’s heritage.
Durriya Kazi
August 9,
2025
Karachi
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