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DHAKA: Dilapidated Ruplal House: A Historic Past

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  • DHAKA: Dilapidated Ruplal House: A Historic Past

    DILAPIDATED RUPLAL HOUSE: A HISTORIC PAST
    Sheikh Arif Bulbon

    The New Nation
    July 16 2008
    Bangladesh

    It is a big shaded enclosure where traders are squabbling with buyers
    in rows of grocery shops, godowns of onions, dried chillies, turmeric,
    garlic, ginger, betel leaves and other spices. This is the present
    day portrait of what was once an imposing edifice, Ruplal House
    in Farashganj-one of the few prominent colonial structures left in
    Dhaka city.

    Ruplal House, overlooking a riverfront promenade, is a grand 19th
    century building in old Dhaka. It was built by two Hindu merchant
    brothers, Ruplal Das and Raghunath Das, on the northern bank of River
    Buriganga. They purchased an old building from Aratun, an Armenian
    tycoon, in 1840 and had it pulled down.

    Ruplal House was built on the site at a huge cost according to the
    design of an architect of the Martin Company in Kolkata. Divided into
    two unequal blocks in slightly different styles, it is a two-storied
    structure.

    At present, the Ruplal House is occupied by local spice and vegetable
    traders and a colony of unauthorised squatters. It has recently
    been included in the 'protected' list of buildings by the Department
    of Archaeology.

    When this correspondent visited the compound of the 150-year old
    palatial residence of the well-known merchants, the Das Babus, the
    whole area was buzzing with wholesalers and retailers turning the
    entire complex into a grimy and chaotic trading hub. People, pushcart,
    wheelbarrows, pickup vans and coolies rushing in and out of the place
    with loads of supplies apparently unaware of the historical value of
    the house.

    There are around 50 rooms in the house including a central hall in
    the upper floor of the west-wing of the building. The ceiling of the
    hall contains elegantly floral motif and the dance floor laid with
    teak wood, which was pilfered over the years, said a local resident.

    The architecture of the two-storey Ruplal House is unique. It is
    divided into two unequal blocks built in slightly different styles. The
    building contains over 50 rooms of various sizes, including a number
    of spacious halls. In 1888, when Lord Duffrin, the Viceroy of India
    visited Dhaka, a ball was arranged in his honour in the dance hall
    of this mansion.

    The central hall, an elegantly decorated dance hall with a wooden
    floor, is situated on the upper floor of the more impressive
    west-wing. On the north and south two broad verandas run the
    entire length of the block and are supported on either round or
    semi-Corinthian columns or rectangular brick pillars with segmented
    or trefoil arches above.

    Ruplal House first came into limelight in 1886 when one of the
    brothers, Ruplal Das, threw a ball in the honour of Lord Duffrin
    when Ahsan Manzil was the dominating contemporary edifice. A massive
    cross-migration of Hindus and Muslims took place after the partition of
    the Sub-Continent in 1947. At that time the families of Das brothers
    left for Kolkata. Through a formal deed of exchange in 1962, one
    Siddiq Jamal became the owner of the place.

    Tawhid Amanullah, a conservation expert, said, "The floral motif on
    the columns is the characteristics of classical Corinthian fluted
    column. On the northern and southern sides there are elongated
    verandas with grills made of cast iron. The motif on the grill is
    called art-deco, which is found in the contemporary buildings like
    the ones in Panam Nagar, Tajhat Rajbari in Rangpur and Puthia Rajbari
    in Rajshahi."

    To turn the place into a tourist spot, Amanullah suggested setting
    up of a museum, library and a cultural centre in the house to attract
    local and foreign tourists.
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