fbpx
Wikipedia

Writers' Building

The Writers' Buildings, often shortened to just Writers', is the official secretariat building of the state government of West Bengal in Kolkata, India. The 150-meter long building covers the entire northern stretch of the iconic Lal Dighi pond at the centre of historic B.B.D. Bagh, long considered as the administrative and business hub of the city.

Writers' Building
মহাকরণ
Main façade of the Writers' Building
General information
LocationBBD Bagh, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Coordinates22°34′25″N 88°20′59″E / 22.57369°N 88.349634°E / 22.57369; 88.349634Coordinates: 22°34′25″N 88°20′59″E / 22.57369°N 88.349634°E / 22.57369; 88.349634
Construction started1777
Opened1780; 243 years ago (1780)
OwnerGovernment of West Bengal
Design and construction
Architect(s)Thomas Lyon

It originally served as the principal administrative office for writers (junior clerks) of the British East India Company (EIC). Designed by Thomas Lyon in 1777, the Writers' Building has gone through a long series of extensions over the centuries. Since India's independence in 1947, it housed the office of the Chief Minister of West Bengal, cabinet ministers and other senior officials, until 4 October 2013, when a major restoration of the building was announced. The majority of government departments were subsequently moved out to a new repurposed building named Nabanna in Howrah on a temporary basis.

The building has been called a mini-township of sorts with a built-up area of around 550,000 square feet. Before the shifting of the state secretariat, the building housed 34 departments of the state government, and served as the office for approximately 6,000 employees.[1] As of October 2020, the renovation of the building continues.

History

The Writers' Building was designed by Thomas Lyon in 1777 for the EIC, which wanted to consolidate its trading operations in India and centralize the tax operations the EIC undertook in Mughal Bengal. Over time, as British mercantile interest in India grew and the EIC defeated the Nawabs of Bengal, it was repurposed as the effective headquarters of the EIC and later the entire British Raj in the Indian subcontinent. For more than 200 years the building served as the centre of British power and claims, as the seat of government of the Bengal Presidency and later the province of Bengal. In the early part of the twentieth century, the building was the site of agitations, violence and assassination attempts during the Indian independence movement.[2] Since India's independence in 1947, it has served as the state secretariat and has been the location of turbulent politics, mob violence and police brutality. It has also become a popular metonym for the government of West Bengal, and especially the unbroken 34-year long Left Front rule in the state.

The building has also played a fundamental part in shaping the history of the immediate region, as the village of Kalikata became British Calcutta and finally Kolkata. From its conception, the building was designed to become the focal administrative and business hub of the city emerging around it and was thus built close to existing infrastructure owned by the EIC. It was constructed on parts of the same parcel of land where the original Fort William, the EICs primary military stronghold in Bengal, stood until 1756. It also marked the centre of the 'White Town', populated primarily by English merchants, officers and EIC functionaries which was kept separate from the 'Black Town' populated primarily by the native landowners and businessmen.

Timeline

 
Statue of Minerva atop Writers' Building

1777-1780: Construction The site of the demolished St Anne's church and the adjoining plot were granted to Thomas Lyon, after whom the road behind Writers Building - Lyons Range - is named, to construct buildings to accommodate the junior servants of the East India Company called "writers". Lyon may have been a carpenter earlier in England but had established himself as an architect in Kolkata at the time, and completed the construction acting on behalf of Richard Barwell, member of the Supreme Council of Bengal and himself an ex-writer for EIC. Warren Hastings, then the governor of Governor-General of the Presidency of Fort William presided over the project and presumably was the one who commissioned it. Writers' Building was the first three-storey building in Kolkata. The main block, with a ground coverage of 37850 Square Feet was completed in 1780. It occupied one side of what was then called Tank Square (today's Lal Dighi, the large body of water in the centre of BBD Bagh, then called Dalhousie Square). It was built on a purely functional premise, shunning decorations for a straight facade and enclosure style compound in the back. The building initially opened with 19 residential quarters, each with three sets of windows, and was counted as a bit of an eyesore by the erstwhile English residents.[2][3]

1800: College Fort William College, opened to train writers in Oriental languages, later moved to this building. Over the next 20 years, structural changes were made, including a new hostel for 32 students and an exam hall (which still exist), a lecture hall, four libraries and rooms to teach Hindi and Persian.[3]

1821: Iconic facade created A 128 ft-long verandah with Ionic columns, each 32 ft high, were added on the first and second floors.[3]

 
Cluster of statues atop Writers' Building

1830: Government College of Engineering The college moved out of Writers' and the building fell into the hands of private individuals who turned it into living quarters, shops and godowns. The Government College of Engineering functioned from here for some time.

1871–74: Railway Headquarter George Campbell, lieutenant governor-general, felt the need for a secretariat for "quick disposal of work". But with the East Indian Railway Company occupying a large space at Writers' being unable to find alternative accommodation fast, the plan was slow to unfold.

1877–82: Secretariat for Bengal Province Ashley Eden, lieutenant-governor of Bengal, was told to relocate the principal offices, housed on Sudder Street and Chowringhee, to Writers'. Because of the space crunch, three new blocks (classified as Blocks 1,2 and 5 today) were initially constructed, that stood perpendicular to the main block.[3]

1879–1906: Further expansion Two further blocks (classified as Blocks 3 and 4 today) were added, approached by iron staircases that are still in use. The total ground coverage of the five new numbered blocks stood at 58825 square feet. Writers' acquired its Greco-Roman look, complete with the portico in the central bay and the red surface of exposed brick. The Victorian Era British administration wanted to give a grand and powerful image to this public institution and Writers’ received a makeover in French Renaissance style with the iconic parapet being put in place and edifying statues[2] sculpted by William Frederick Woodington lining the terrace, installed in 1883. The statue of Minerva stands above the central portico.[4][3]

1930: Assassination of Colonel N. S. Simpson

 
Statue of Benoy, Badal and Dinesh

On 8 December 1930 Benoy Basu, Badal Gupta and Dinesh Gupta, members of the underground revolutionary group Bengal Volunteers, headed for the Writers' Building. Dressed in European attire, they carried loaded revolvers. Upon entering the building, they shot dead the notorious Inspector General of Police, Colonel N .S. Simpson, infamous for his brutal oppression of political prisoners, most of whom were Indian freedom fighters.[citation needed]

After assassinating him, they occupied the building, and soon a gun battle followed in the corridors. Unable to stand up to the numerous forces of the Calcutta police, the trio soon found themselves overpowered and cornered.[citation needed] Unwilling to give themselves up, Badal took potassium cyanide and died instantly, while his comrades shot themselves. Benoy died five days later in hospital but Dinesh survived only to be hanged on 7 July 1931.[citation needed]

 
In memory of martyrdom of Benoy, Badal, Dinesh. Writers' Building

Today Dalhousie Square is named after the trio and is called B.B.D. Bagh. A statue of Benoy, Badal and Dinesh stands in front of the Writers' Building, showing Benoy, the group leader, leading his comrades in their final battle.[5]

1945-47: Open courtyards sealed by expansion Due to requirements of huge space, block A, B, C, D, were constructed. As a result, 19314 square feet was added to the building.[2][3]

Since 1947: Further expansion & Centre of West Bengal politics At the time of India's independence, the building had a large courtyard with seven blocks. Beginning in the mid-1950s, Block E, F was added in the large rectangular courtyards that separated the existing blocks in the back of the building. In the 70s, Block G and CGA were added (adding 17302 square feet on space) to complete the building's final avatar of 13 interconnected blocks making up a literal administrative maze, for the next 4 decades. But only the main block, including the rotunda and five main blocks, are officially classified as heritage structures. The elevation of the building has remained the same overall and the earliest 3-storey structure has been preserved.[4][3]

Statues

The giant pediment at the centre is crowned with the statue of Minerva. The terrace also contains several other statues and notable among them are four clusters of statues, christened 'Justice', 'Commerce', 'Science' and 'Agriculture', with the respective Greek gods and goddesses of these four disciplines (Zeus, Hermes, Athena and Demeter respectively) flanked by a European and an Indian practitioner of these vocations.[6]

 
Writers' Building from across Lal Dighi in B.B.D. Bagh

Renovation

The building went under renovation in late 2013, in a project costing 2 billion (US$25 million). To facilitate this, the state Secretariat and Chief Minister's office temporarily shifted to an abandoned skyscraper owned by the Hooghly River Bridge Commissioners Office named Nabanna in Howrah.[7][8] In February 2014, the project was stalled after conservation experts and the West Bengal Public Works Department found the plan submitted by an architect firm insufficient.[9] Meanwhile, a team of Jadavpur University and Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology, Shibpur architects was invited to conduct tests of the structure, before the actual renovation could be started.[10]

The renovation efforts also involved the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH). The team had also sought consultations with heritage conservationists from countries like Australia and Germany before submitting a detailed proposal in late-2015. But even by mid-2016, work on ground had not started due to government indecisiveness and bureaucratic red tape.[11]

Engineers had to fortify the structure before the East West Metro Tunnel, part of the expansion of the Kolkata Metro, was dug past the building in November-2017.[12]

Tenders for civil engineering work in various parts of the main structure were being issued as of end-2018. [13]

Picture gallery

References

  1. ^ "Kolkata's iconic Writer's Building gets ready for a facelift". The Weekend Leader. 4 October 2014. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Srinath Perur (10 April 2005). "The Writers' Building, Kolkata: a history of cities in 50 buildings, day 13". Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Writers' Buildings (Mahakaran) Through The Passage of Time" (PDF). Public Works Department, Government of West Bengal. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b Das, Soumitra (20 May 2011). "Writ of Writers'". telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
  5. ^ Ghosh, Durba (20 July 2017). Gentlemanly Terrorists: Political Violence and the Colonial State in India, 1919–1947. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107186668.
  6. ^ Mazumdar, Jaideep (13 September 2012). "Kolkata walk: Tracing the heritage footsteps of the Raj". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
  7. ^ "Writers' Buildings temporarily dethroned as West Bengal's seat of power". 5 October 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  8. ^ "Mamata Banerjee moves to Howrah's HRBC from Writers' Buildings". Economic Times. 5 October 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  9. ^ "Writers' revival plan 'flawed'". The Times of India. 19 February 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  10. ^ "Tests for Writers' Buildings before restoration". The Times of India. 4 February 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  11. ^ "Writers' Buildings renovation yet to start even after three years". Business Standard. 24 May 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  12. ^ "Writers' clears tunnel test". Business Standard. 11 November 2017. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  13. ^ "Tender for electrical work at Writer's Building". 16 November 2018. Retrieved 19 August 2019.

External links

writers, building, often, shortened, just, writers, official, secretariat, building, state, government, west, bengal, kolkata, india, meter, long, building, covers, entire, northern, stretch, iconic, dighi, pond, centre, historic, bagh, long, considered, admin. The Writers Buildings often shortened to just Writers is the official secretariat building of the state government of West Bengal in Kolkata India The 150 meter long building covers the entire northern stretch of the iconic Lal Dighi pond at the centre of historic B B D Bagh long considered as the administrative and business hub of the city Writers Buildingমহ করণMain facade of the Writers BuildingGeneral informationLocationBBD Bagh Kolkata West Bengal IndiaCoordinates22 34 25 N 88 20 59 E 22 57369 N 88 349634 E 22 57369 88 349634 Coordinates 22 34 25 N 88 20 59 E 22 57369 N 88 349634 E 22 57369 88 349634Construction started1777Opened1780 243 years ago 1780 OwnerGovernment of West BengalDesign and constructionArchitect s Thomas LyonIt originally served as the principal administrative office for writers junior clerks of the British East India Company EIC Designed by Thomas Lyon in 1777 the Writers Building has gone through a long series of extensions over the centuries Since India s independence in 1947 it housed the office of the Chief Minister of West Bengal cabinet ministers and other senior officials until 4 October 2013 when a major restoration of the building was announced The majority of government departments were subsequently moved out to a new repurposed building named Nabanna in Howrah on a temporary basis The building has been called a mini township of sorts with a built up area of around 550 000 square feet Before the shifting of the state secretariat the building housed 34 departments of the state government and served as the office for approximately 6 000 employees 1 As of October 2020 the renovation of the building continues Contents 1 History 1 1 Timeline 1 2 Statues 2 Renovation 3 Picture gallery 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditThe Writers Building was designed by Thomas Lyon in 1777 for the EIC which wanted to consolidate its trading operations in India and centralize the tax operations the EIC undertook in Mughal Bengal Over time as British mercantile interest in India grew and the EIC defeated the Nawabs of Bengal it was repurposed as the effective headquarters of the EIC and later the entire British Raj in the Indian subcontinent For more than 200 years the building served as the centre of British power and claims as the seat of government of the Bengal Presidency and later the province of Bengal In the early part of the twentieth century the building was the site of agitations violence and assassination attempts during the Indian independence movement 2 Since India s independence in 1947 it has served as the state secretariat and has been the location of turbulent politics mob violence and police brutality It has also become a popular metonym for the government of West Bengal and especially the unbroken 34 year long Left Front rule in the state The building has also played a fundamental part in shaping the history of the immediate region as the village of Kalikata became British Calcutta and finally Kolkata From its conception the building was designed to become the focal administrative and business hub of the city emerging around it and was thus built close to existing infrastructure owned by the EIC It was constructed on parts of the same parcel of land where the original Fort William the EICs primary military stronghold in Bengal stood until 1756 It also marked the centre of the White Town populated primarily by English merchants officers and EIC functionaries which was kept separate from the Black Town populated primarily by the native landowners and businessmen Timeline Edit Statue of Minerva atop Writers Building1777 1780 Construction The site of the demolished St Anne s church and the adjoining plot were granted to Thomas Lyon after whom the road behind Writers Building Lyons Range is named to construct buildings to accommodate the junior servants of the East India Company called writers Lyon may have been a carpenter earlier in England but had established himself as an architect in Kolkata at the time and completed the construction acting on behalf of Richard Barwell member of the Supreme Council of Bengal and himself an ex writer for EIC Warren Hastings then the governor of Governor General of the Presidency of Fort William presided over the project and presumably was the one who commissioned it Writers Building was the first three storey building in Kolkata The main block with a ground coverage of 37850 Square Feet was completed in 1780 It occupied one side of what was then called Tank Square today s Lal Dighi the large body of water in the centre of BBD Bagh then called Dalhousie Square It was built on a purely functional premise shunning decorations for a straight facade and enclosure style compound in the back The building initially opened with 19 residential quarters each with three sets of windows and was counted as a bit of an eyesore by the erstwhile English residents 2 3 1800 College Fort William College opened to train writers in Oriental languages later moved to this building Over the next 20 years structural changes were made including a new hostel for 32 students and an exam hall which still exist a lecture hall four libraries and rooms to teach Hindi and Persian 3 1821 Iconic facade created A 128 ft long verandah with Ionic columns each 32 ft high were added on the first and second floors 3 Cluster of statues atop Writers Building1830 Government College of Engineering The college moved out of Writers and the building fell into the hands of private individuals who turned it into living quarters shops and godowns The Government College of Engineering functioned from here for some time 1871 74 Railway Headquarter George Campbell lieutenant governor general felt the need for a secretariat for quick disposal of work But with the East Indian Railway Company occupying a large space at Writers being unable to find alternative accommodation fast the plan was slow to unfold 1877 82 Secretariat for Bengal Province Ashley Eden lieutenant governor of Bengal was told to relocate the principal offices housed on Sudder Street and Chowringhee to Writers Because of the space crunch three new blocks classified as Blocks 1 2 and 5 today were initially constructed that stood perpendicular to the main block 3 1879 1906 Further expansion Two further blocks classified as Blocks 3 and 4 today were added approached by iron staircases that are still in use The total ground coverage of the five new numbered blocks stood at 58825 square feet Writers acquired its Greco Roman look complete with the portico in the central bay and the red surface of exposed brick The Victorian Era British administration wanted to give a grand and powerful image to this public institution and Writers received a makeover in French Renaissance style with the iconic parapet being put in place and edifying statues 2 sculpted by William Frederick Woodington lining the terrace installed in 1883 The statue of Minerva stands above the central portico 4 3 1930 Assassination of Colonel N S Simpson Statue of Benoy Badal and DineshOn 8 December 1930 Benoy Basu Badal Gupta and Dinesh Gupta members of the underground revolutionary group Bengal Volunteers headed for the Writers Building Dressed in European attire they carried loaded revolvers Upon entering the building they shot dead the notorious Inspector General of Police Colonel N S Simpson infamous for his brutal oppression of political prisoners most of whom were Indian freedom fighters citation needed After assassinating him they occupied the building and soon a gun battle followed in the corridors Unable to stand up to the numerous forces of the Calcutta police the trio soon found themselves overpowered and cornered citation needed Unwilling to give themselves up Badal took potassium cyanide and died instantly while his comrades shot themselves Benoy died five days later in hospital but Dinesh survived only to be hanged on 7 July 1931 citation needed In memory of martyrdom of Benoy Badal Dinesh Writers Building Today Dalhousie Square is named after the trio and is called B B D Bagh A statue of Benoy Badal and Dinesh stands in front of the Writers Building showing Benoy the group leader leading his comrades in their final battle 5 1945 47 Open courtyards sealed by expansion Due to requirements of huge space block A B C D were constructed As a result 19314 square feet was added to the building 2 3 Since 1947 Further expansion amp Centre of West Bengal politics At the time of India s independence the building had a large courtyard with seven blocks Beginning in the mid 1950s Block E F was added in the large rectangular courtyards that separated the existing blocks in the back of the building In the 70s Block G and CGA were added adding 17302 square feet on space to complete the building s final avatar of 13 interconnected blocks making up a literal administrative maze for the next 4 decades But only the main block including the rotunda and five main blocks are officially classified as heritage structures The elevation of the building has remained the same overall and the earliest 3 storey structure has been preserved 4 3 Statues Edit The giant pediment at the centre is crowned with the statue of Minerva The terrace also contains several other statues and notable among them are four clusters of statues christened Justice Commerce Science and Agriculture with the respective Greek gods and goddesses of these four disciplines Zeus Hermes Athena and Demeter respectively flanked by a European and an Indian practitioner of these vocations 6 Writers Building from across Lal Dighi in B B D BaghRenovation EditThe building went under renovation in late 2013 in a project costing 2 billion US 25 million To facilitate this the state Secretariat and Chief Minister s office temporarily shifted to an abandoned skyscraper owned by the Hooghly River Bridge Commissioners Office named Nabanna in Howrah 7 8 In February 2014 the project was stalled after conservation experts and the West Bengal Public Works Department found the plan submitted by an architect firm insufficient 9 Meanwhile a team of Jadavpur University and Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology Shibpur architects was invited to conduct tests of the structure before the actual renovation could be started 10 The renovation efforts also involved the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage INTACH The team had also sought consultations with heritage conservationists from countries like Australia and Germany before submitting a detailed proposal in late 2015 But even by mid 2016 work on ground had not started due to government indecisiveness and bureaucratic red tape 11 Engineers had to fortify the structure before the East West Metro Tunnel part of the expansion of the Kolkata Metro was dug past the building in November 2017 12 Tenders for civil engineering work in various parts of the main structure were being issued as of end 2018 13 Picture gallery Edit The original building with Holwell s Blackhole incident monument in the background Writers Building c 1915 Pre independence photograph of the facade Writers Buildings Calcutta Second view Writers Buildings Calcutta Third view Writers Buildings Calcutta Fourth view References Edit Kolkata s iconic Writer s Building gets ready for a facelift The Weekend Leader 4 October 2014 Retrieved 19 August 2019 a b c d Srinath Perur 10 April 2005 The Writers Building Kolkata a history of cities in 50 buildings day 13 Retrieved 17 October 2020 a b c d e f g Writers Buildings Mahakaran Through The Passage of Time PDF Public Works Department Government of West Bengal Retrieved 17 October 2020 a b Das Soumitra 20 May 2011 Writ of Writers telegraphindia com Retrieved 19 January 2012 Ghosh Durba 20 July 2017 Gentlemanly Terrorists Political Violence and the Colonial State in India 1919 1947 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107186668 Mazumdar Jaideep 13 September 2012 Kolkata walk Tracing the heritage footsteps of the Raj The Times of India Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 19 January 2012 Writers Buildings temporarily dethroned as West Bengal s seat of power 5 October 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Mamata Banerjee moves to Howrah s HRBC from Writers Buildings Economic Times 5 October 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Writers revival plan flawed The Times of India 19 February 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Tests for Writers Buildings before restoration The Times of India 4 February 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Writers Buildings renovation yet to start even after three years Business Standard 24 May 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2019 Writers clears tunnel test Business Standard 11 November 2017 Retrieved 19 August 2019 Tender for electrical work at Writer s Building 16 November 2018 Retrieved 19 August 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Writers Building Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Writers 27 Building amp oldid 1117644992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.