Constructing the World’s Biggest Popup City
One of the complex interactions between humans and religion is the Kumbh riverside festival - the largest single-purpose gathering of people on the planet. This year Kumbh Mela 2019 at Prayagraj (Allahabad) hosts the world’s largest temporary city.
The Kumbh religious gathering finds its first mention about 2,000 years ago by the Chinese traveller Hsuan Tsang. Today, the Kumbh Mela is part of UNESCO’S Representative list of “Intangible Cultural Events of Humanity”.
Economic Revenues
According to CII, the mega Kumbh Mela, is expected to generate a revenue of Rs 1200 billion for Uttar Pradesh. The economic activities associated with it generate employment for over six lakh workers across various sectors. The hospitality sector is employing 2,50,000 people, airlines and airports around 1,50,000, tour operators 45,000 and eco-tourism & medical tourism combined employment figures are 85,000 approximately. There will be around 55,000 new jobs in the unorganized sector comprising tour guides, taxi drivers, interpreters, volunteers etc. Also read http://realtyplusmag.com/budget-sop-opera-2019-20/
Neighbouring states like Rajasthan, Uttarkhand, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh will also benefit with a large number of national and foreign tourists expected to explore other destinations. Overall, the mega festival will generate direct and indirect business activities and increase in income levels for government agencies and individual traders across the country.
Urbanism Lessons
What makes the Kumbh Mela spectacular, apart from its enormous density of population and infrastructure, is the peek it offers in the cultural traits of a nation bound by faith and traditions. Thus, we may learn how to create an eco-system that choreographs various communities and economic strata together. Unlike the Olympic Games or other international events, this city is designed to be erected, inhabited and dismantled all in the space of a mere 4-5 months and in a way forcing us to think how infrastructure might be used to better organize space and integrate environmental change.
Kumbh microcosm—at the scale of a small city can be cited as a marvel of civic planning and logistics and an almost perfect coordination between various agencies. The accountability & flexibility offered to various state agencies is the key to successful implementation of projects on ground and perhaps worth replicating in our permanent cities.
As Architect Rahul Mehrotra of RMA Architects had once stated, “From the Kumbh we believe we can learn about planning and design, but also about cultural identity and urban adjustment. Issues of social inclusion, diversity and even democracy emerge under its framework of a neutralising grid of roads. The Kumbh Mela is a case study in which we can see a process that has already mastered certain systems; how can these now be used for low-impact and economical urban design, educating large populations on sustainable living strategies or disaster response?”
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