This
post is supported by an extract (a very small piece of text) from the catalog
of an exhibition, Light Structures at
Deutsches Architektur Museum (DAM) at
Frankfurt am Main and later at Freie Akademie der Kunste in Hamburg,
and planned to have travelled to and been shown at Universitat fur Bodenkultur in Vienna, the Universita IUAV de Venezia, the Tongji
University in Shanghai and the YSA
Gallery of the Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
The
extract is what an engineer (in the interest of full disclosure, I have had personal interactions with this structural engineer who is a little less than a generation older to me, and I am in awe of him) said about the iconic Second Hooghly
Bridge across River Hooghly, also called Vidyasagar Setu, in Kolkata. The engineer responds to the following
question:
Hot countries are often
poor. You came up with a highly original idea for the bridge you built in Calcutta.
When you mention such projects you often use the term social competence. What
does the term mean to you?
The
response:
I want it written on my
gravestone that I collaborated on this bridge. The Hooghly Bridge is the
structure of which we … can most honestly claim that we engineers did something
for our fellow men. I went there for first talks in in 1971, and the bridge was
finally completed in 1993. In other words, we wrestled with this bridge in
Calcutta for over 20 years. The brief was for a bridge that could be built
without imported materials—in order to create work for local people. Because
there was neither welding steel nor welding devices, we faced the task of
designing the bridge in such a manner that it could be riveted. Just imagine—riveting
a 1,000-meter-long cable-stayed bridge! To this very day I am delighted that we
did not call off the whole thing, but on the contrary took up the challenge
willingly. The fascinating thing is that the rivets proved to be an excellent
solution and saved us a lot of potential welding problems. “Good riveting is
better than bad welding” was our witty slogan. As a result, the bridge has its
own unique character, and could not be more attractive since there is nothing
superfluous about it. The rivets lend the steel surfaces an attractive structure.
The bridge connects West and East Bengal [my note:
the obvious error may please be excused], and
its construction kept thousands of families in work and food. The people in
Calcutta see it as their bridge—what more do you want?
(Please take in the first sentence in the above response in all its import.)
I was one among those who felt not so proud of the long gestation period of the bridge. But, having come to know the context (there is lot more beyond what is given above), I know that my profession did indeed make a contribution to life.
I was one among those who felt not so proud of the long gestation period of the bridge. But, having come to know the context (there is lot more beyond what is given above), I know that my profession did indeed make a contribution to life.
If
people talk derisively about Calcutta Metro (the first line, between Dum Dum
and Tollygunge), particularly about its program of execution seemingly having
extended to eternity, I say, most everything good takes time!
Think
about it, the Vidyasagar Setu and Calcutta Metro are contemporaries. Then,
justifiably their extended period of construction must have been influenced by
the climes of those times, including concerns about foreign exchange, technology transfer, and other factors not within
the control of the engineers. This is not a defensive position; rather it is
the fact.
I
am proud of my profession and I am proud of myself for being a part of it. Now,
if Delhi Metro is growing much faster, I am proud on this score also, but
acknowledging that time comparisons between now and 20-40 years ago are not
valid unless appropriately contextualized.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
P.S.
Just two questions – if we are planning to have extensive networks of metro
systems throughout the country (there really is no other option, given the pace
of urbanization), and a significant proportion of it could indeed be
underground, why not build our capabilities, including in manufacturing the
machinery, in Tunnel Boring Machines (TBM) and methods? Why not reduce foreign
exchange outflow while looking to export our capabilities so developed?
2 comments:
Thanks for the post. I never knew this fact about the Vidyasagar Setu. Forget manufacturing TBMs. I was dismayed to read that the labor to run them for the Mamma Metro project are all from Thailand!
Thanks Amrit, first for bein interested in this almost profession-specific post. Secondly, evenforChennai metro,coming up after Namma Metro of Bangalore, the TBM operators are Chinese. In fact, knowing this factoid made me go one step up in the process. You caught that nicely.
I have learned much about Vidyasagar Setu only because I was curious and opportunities presented themselves because I was curious. Likewise about the membrane roof of the Jawaharlal NehruStadium in Delhi. It is truly a pity that my fellow professionals are curiosity-challenged. I am trying to do the best I can.
RE
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