Shimla’s iconic Town Hall to get a facelift

The British-era Tudor-style structure will be restored to its original look within two years

July 11, 2014 03:35 am | Updated 03:35 am IST - Shimla

New Delhi, 30/06/2014: Index-- A view of Municipal Corporation Building at Shimla City in Himachal Pradesh on June 27, 2014. Photo: R_V_Moorthy

New Delhi, 30/06/2014: Index-- A view of Municipal Corporation Building at Shimla City in Himachal Pradesh on June 27, 2014. Photo: R_V_Moorthy

Thanks to a major leg-up from the Asian Development Bank, a blast from the colonial past will soon greet visitors to Shimla, India’s summer capital during the British Raj, with the Himachal Pradesh government set to restore the iconic Town Hall located on The Mall, a favourite haunt of those out for a stroll.

“The building will be restored as per the original pattern within two years. For this, Rs. 8 crore has been allocated,” Manoj Sharma, joint director with the State Tourism department, told IANS . The ADB has provided 70 per cent of the money, with the State chipping in with 30 per cent.

The building, constructed in 1908 in the half-timbered Tudor style-all-wooden frames and shingled eaves, currently houses the Shimla Municipal Corporation.

Its exteriors and interiors will be refurbished by polishing and repairing the stonework. The windows and rooftops will be replaced and the Gothic facade will be improved.

Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh has issued directions to get the Town Hall vacated at the earliest for its renovation. It would be a temporary shift till the heritage building gets a new look, he said.

Official sources said the Chief Minister’s order came after the Shimla Municipal Corporation refused to vacate the building for renovation.

“The government is providing us space for our public utility offices in bits and pieces and that too at different places. We want space in one office and that too near the present office. Otherwise, we will not shift from this place,” Mayor Sanjay Chauhan told IANS.

Sources said the corporation functionaries are expressing apprehensions that they would never get the Town Hall back once they vacate it for renovation. It might be handed over to the State Tourism department, which is renovating it.

Officials involved in restoration said glazing work inside the complex and stonework polishing on the outer walls would not start until the entire complex was vacated.

Historians and old-timers are happy with the Chief Minister’s commitment to restoring and preserving Shimla’s traditional glory.

“Like the Gaiety Theatre, the Town Hall also needs restoration. It’s a right step to protect the British heritage,” Raaja Bhasin, co-convener of the Himachal Pradesh chapter of Intach (Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage), told IANS.

Gaiety Theatre, where Nobel laureate Rudyard Kipling and legendary actors Prithviraj Kapoor and Balraj Sahni once performed, reopened in June 2009 after five years of renovation, with Rs.12 crore being spent to restore its original Gothic style of architecture. It is located adjacent to the Town Hall.

Octogenarian Ramesh Sood, who was born and brought up in the Queen of Hills, as Shimla was fondly called by the British colonial rulers, said most of the relics of the Raj were either crumbling or being reduced to ashes.

Official sources said that along with refurbishing the Town Hall, the State Tourism department will also undertake a project on rebuilding the Mall Road’s surface by replacing the conventional coal tar with cobble stones.

The Town Hall has been the centre of municipal activities in Shimla right from the day it was opened in 1908.

The municipal committee of Shimla passed a resolution on October 21, 1880, for setting up a public building to serve as the town’s civic offices as well as for public meetings, banquets and concerts, Tourism department archives say.

“Any other town in the world of the same size or importance as Simla and a seat of the government would not be absolutely without a public hall as Simla now is. There is no room in any building in Simla where His Excellency the Viceroy or the Lieutenant Governor can hold even a small durbar, or where public meetings or gatherings can take place with safety or without overcrowding or inconvenience,” the resolution reads.

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