Fading Legacy of the Architectural Heritage of the Historic Core of Karachi

In 1839 British East India Company captured the town of Karachi. After an effortless resistance from the locals the fort was conquered by the British commander sir Charles Napier. The village of Kolachi then was annexed to British India and the city was labeled as Karachi. With the British occupatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Engineering, technology & applied science research technology & applied science research, 2018-04, Vol.8 (2), p.2735-2740
Hauptverfasser: Soomro, T. A., Soomro, M. A., Laghari, A. N., Bhangwar, D. K.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In 1839 British East India Company captured the town of Karachi. After an effortless resistance from the locals the fort was conquered by the British commander sir Charles Napier. The village of Kolachi then was annexed to British India and the city was labeled as Karachi. With the British occupation a phase of new sophisticated architecture and development started. Before that the city was based upon the vernacular mud architecture. These developments resulted in an influx of economic migrants who helped in making Karachi as a multinational and a multicultural city. This paper investigates the architectural attributes that the historic core of the city offers. It also discusses the side by side development of the native and British towns. The paper also researches about the existing state of the architecture precedent of the British colonial past of the city and the urban blight occurred to them over time in various forms like vandalism, encroachments, illegal repairs, etc.
ISSN:2241-4487
1792-8036
DOI:10.48084/etasr.1779