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Phoenix from urban decay

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  • Phoenix from urban decay

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    April 23 2005

    Phoenix from urban decay
    SUBHRO SAHA

    What stands dull and decrepit today, in the heart of Park Street,
    could be busy and beautiful in another 18 months.

    Heritage hotel and landscaped pedestrian plaza, boutique brands and
    bookstore, open-air theatre and rooftop exhibition space, sunken
    parking lot and rolling art gallery.

    Shades of Leicester Square or a mini Centre Georges Pompidou is what
    the 95-year-old Park Mansions promises to evoke after a restoration
    and adaptive reuse initiative undertaken by the Apeejay Surrendra
    Group (see box).

    "We want to create a destination that will give people of all ages
    and calling enough reasons to come to Park Street," stresses Jit
    Paul, adviser to the group and the brain behind the revival scheme,
    which got the heritage panel nod on Thursday evening.

    Constructed by Armenian jute merchant Thaddeus Mesrope Thaddeus in
    1910, Park Mansions was acquired by Paul from estate managers Talbot
    and Company, and housed the French cultural centre premises, Alliance
    Francaise, besides Sky Room, Bombay Photo and Rajniklal.

    Alliance was ravaged by a fire, Sky Room downed shutters and the
    building - flanked by Park Street, Free School Street and Royd
    Street, and hence, with a regal triple frontage - now lies in an
    advanced state of urban decay.

    "We plan to repair the crumbling edifice and restore it as a vibrant,
    iconic rendezvous for residents, with a basket of activities,"
    explains architect Dulal Mukherjee, anchoring the design solution.

    The five entry points to Park Mansions, built in "old colonial style
    with an East European aura", will be given a facelift with grand
    marble lobbies, modern elevators and stairways. A quaint heritage
    hotel built across four levels and one-bedroom studio apartments will
    complement exclusive brands housed in the retail quarter.

    The piece de resistance of the makeover model will be the interactive
    zone and pedestrian plaza, created across the 50,000 sq ft central
    courtyard, now essentially used as parking space.

    "It will be very contemporary and I plan to use deconstruction
    architecture to create a feel of unlimited space with a strong
    pedestrian axis and totally segregated vehicular traffic," says
    Mukherjee.

    With a blend of hard and soft landscaping, the well of the mansion
    will throb with activity, revolving around performing arts and music
    and spilling onto the rooftop arena. A twin-level sunken parking lot
    will hold over 100 vehicles with access along the eastern corridor.

    "For two decades, we allowed Park Mansions to disintegrate. Now, we
    are determined to make amends and do something positive that would
    energise the region and enthuse others," says Paul, underlining the
    need for a holistic restoration drive across the city, instead of
    piecemeal efforts.

    The Apeejay Surrendra Group plans to retain T3 - The Tea Table at its
    present location, across the new-look Flurys. While most of the
    ground-level retail tenants like Rajniklal, GKB Opticals, Burlingtons
    and Gupta Brothers will stay where they are, talks are on with a host
    of new, high-profile new entrants like Citizen.
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