Project Dharavi

A group of photographers, writers and painters document Dharavi as the massive Dharavi Redevelopment Plan gets underway. Dharavi of our popular imagination will be razed and new structures will emerge in the same space: residential high rises, designated commercial units, civic amenities and utilities. We hope to capture the change as it occurs and takes hold, and in the process, create a documentary on a changing society.


Wednesday, July 21, 2010

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About this Project

In order to record this period of extraordinary change, we as a group of photographers and writers, will be visiting, photographing and documenting Dharavi everyday over a period of 12 months.This unique approach will capture the change as it occurs; and in the process, we will create a documentary of a changing society.

Dharavi has been written about, photographed and represented on celluloid often but all these images represent its existence in only one moment of time. By consistently recording the structures, scenes, activity and residents, we hope to capture a sense of Dharavi’s human aspiration and endeavour; to mark what will be lost and to document what will emerge

About Dharavi

Sprawled across the centre of Mumbai, India, Dharavi is a slum, a community, an industrial centre and the site of one of the greatest redevelopment programmes in the world. Home to approximately a million people, and the workplace of many more, Dharavi is one of India’s largest industrial hubs of recycling and leather goods, with an economy worth nearly $700 million before last year’s downturn. With 60 neighbourhoods within a 550 acre area, Dharavi is a city within a megopolis; with its own pattern of building, economic activity, labour markets and community. Dharavi's innumerable shops, and factories support not just the migrant labourers they employ, but also their families, who wait in far flung villages for the monthly allowances sent to them. As a result, it is a site of great interest for students of urban planning and design all over the world.

And now, the familiar face of Dharavi is poised to change beyond recognition. The Dharavi Redevelopment Plan, worth Rs15,000 crore (approximately $3 billion) will completely redevelop each of the area’s five sectors.

The Dharavi of our popular imagination will be razed and new structures will emerge in the same space: residential high rises, designated commercial units, civic amenities and new utilities. But residents are apprehensive, and with reason: the DRP will change not just the way Dharavi looks, but also how Dharavi functions. For better or worse, change is coming to Dharavi and nothing will ever be the same.

Contributors

Photographers:
Anuja Gupta
Ushma Jani
Dilip Kamble
Srinivas Kuruganti
N. Mahendran
Sudharak Olwe
Vishal Olwe
Helena Schatzle
Ravi Shekhar

Writers:
Priyanka Bhorpujari
Smita Deshmukh
Rohini Nair
Shobhan Singh

Painters:
Shubhanand Jog
Douglas John
Prakash Bal Joshi
Nirman Chowdhury

Blog Archive

  • ►  2011 (7)
    • May 1 - May 8 (2)
    • February 6 - February 13 (1)
    • January 30 - February 6 (3)
    • January 9 - January 16 (1)
  • ▼  2010 (17)
    • July 18 - July 25 (1)
    • May 2 - May 9 (1)
    • April 18 - April 25 (2)
    • April 11 - April 18 (1)
    • April 4 - April 11 (3)
    • March 28 - April 4 (3)
    • March 21 - March 28 (6)

Links

  • Showtime in Dharavi
  • India should cash in on slums, not remove them:Urban Expert
  • The Dharavi Slum
  • A Slum Is A Slum
  • Dharavi etc...
  • How postmen sort Dharavi maze
  • Life in Dharavi
  • State in for Rs10,000cr Dharavi bonus
  • Shanty-towns emerge targets for development
  • Dharavi: No Millionaires Here
  • How postmen sort Dharavi maze
  • Twilight City
  • Slum Rehabilitation Authority
  • Reality Tours and Travels
  • Life in a Slum
  • Mumbai's Shadow City
  • 227 million people escape world's slums, UN report finds
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