Abstract:
The traditional markets have played a significant role in the development
of historic cities in India; they were developed through time in response to
socioeconomic and cultural needs of the society. But market forms such
as shopping malls and department stores have been cloned endlessly in
both rural and urban areas in many countries as a successful retail model.
Therefore, the more traditional public markets that were once an
expression the local life and culture are now being replacing by the
“McDonaldized” (Rizter, 2006 page 123) marketplaces. They all have a
similar architectural form, type and style that have little or no linkage to
the locale and, in addition, are private zones. The intensity of construction
of such generic market places has been slowly overriding the authentic
identity of market architecture in many regions. In order to distinguish and
express the unique architectural developments and the difference in local
lifestyles of different regions, it is important to maintain local identity of
building that houses “historically stable programs” (Leong, 2011, p. 138)
such as local market. It is also crucial to keep the marketplace public in
nature where people can socialize with greater freedom.(The Return to
Traditional Marketplace, Winnie Lam Ho-Suen, Ryerson University)
The complexities of the functions of these markets can be deciphered and
read into various layers of urban design realm. These attributes work in
cohesion in order to form a complex fabric of socio-cultural-economic
space called market which is full of all sorts of activities, linkages, open
public spaces, junctions, sensory elements, enclosures etc. which in turn
lures and holds the users, and has always have, with the due course of
time.
This thesis aims at studying the relation of various attributes of our
bazaars with the viability of various scenarios in a specific urban
marketplace, ensuring to provide an optimum shopping experience and
multitude of other user requirements at the same time. The deciphered architectural and spatial elements of our local commercial spaces both at
macro (neighborhood level) and micro (deep down in the street fabric) are
analyzed and then applied to design and come up with a language of
contemporary iteration of our bazaars.