Ravjyot Kaur
date of birth:
August 26, 2000
address:
V.P.O. Aut, (Distt.) Mandi, H.P., 175121, India
contact: +91-85808xxxxx
e-mail: ravjyot.kaur@gmail.com
Hello!
I am an Architect and an Urban Design student with a passion for learning and documenting urban phenomena. I embarked upon this journey of living, breathing, documenting, and photographing urban spaces in the form of an Urban Design Course. Since research and writing have always been my forte, this journey has proved to be even more meaningful.
I can often be spotted setting up a tripod, making a poster, attending photo walks, sketching urban life, attending climate debates, reading tales of people on the “Humans of Bombay,” penning down thoughts in my diary, journaling, sipping Cappucino or making Arrabiata Pasta.
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Education
Master of Architecture (Urban Design) | 2022-present
School of Planning and Architecture, Bhopal | 8.92/10.00
Bachelor of Architecture | 2017-22
Malviya National Institute of Technology, Jaipur | 8.28/10.00
AISSCE | 2017
Sidana International School, Amritsar | CBSE | 82.6%
AISSE | 2015
La Montessori School, Kullu | CBSE | 10/10
Skills
Softwares
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe Indesign
Adobe Illustrator
Adobe Premiere Pro
AutoCAD
Depthmap
Google Sketchup
Lumion
MS Office
QGIS
Space Syntax
V-Ray
Languages
Hard Skills
Creative Writing
Drafting
Model-making
3D Modeling
Rendering
Sketching
Social Media Handling
Video Editing
Web Content Writing
Work Experience
Greyt Designs (Content writer) | Apr 2022present
Karyashalla (Content writer) | Feb 2022- present
Mandviwala Qutub and Associates, Mumbai (Architectural Intern) | Jan 2021- June 2021
Design Centre Architects & Engineers, Bhuntar, H.P. (Architectural Intern) | May 2019July 2019
The Post Mayor, Jaipur (Content Writer) | Apr 2019- May 2019
Freelance content writer (Self-employed) | Jan 2018- present
Formative Experience
Environmental Impact Assessment- NPTEL (Ongoing certified course) | 2023 Walk at Bhoj Wetlands attendee | World Wetlands Day, 2023
Social Media Content Creation, Handling for SPAB Urban Design Department
Instagram, LinkedIn Content Creation | 2022-Present
edX Product Design: The Delft Design Approach (certified course)| 2020
Social Media Management
Concevoir, Blitzschlag, Annual Cultural Fest | MNIT Jaipur | 2018
Zonal NASA Convention
Workshop on Architectural Journalism | Gwalior | 2017
References
English | Hindi | Punjabi | German (beginner)
Ar. Qutub Mandviwala
Principal Architect | Mandviwala Qutub and Associates, Mumbai
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Contents
Redensification to Recreate a lively, walkable neighborhood
TT Nagar, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh | Urban Design Studio- I | Sept-Dec 2022
Understanding Urban Networks and Ecology of Peri-Urban Areas
Laharpur, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh | Urban Networks and Systems- I | Sept-Dec 2022
Interpreting Phrases from the book: 101 Things I learned in Urban Design School;
Interpreting keywords on the ‘Public Realm’
Urban Design Methods and Techniques | Aug-Dec 2022
Miscellaneous
Competition Entries | Writing About Cities | Model Making | Photography
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Redensification to recreate a lively, walkable neighborhood
Urban Design Studio- I
Program : Envisioning the future built environment to recreate a lively, walkable neighborhood blended with natural surroundings
The studio focused on the design aspects of Urban Transformation withing the existing urban area. The area was designed almost 50 years ago based on the neighborhood concept, but this essence is slowly getting lost.
Location : TT Nagar, (Tulsi Nagar, Shivaji Nagar) Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
Area: 255 hectares
Type : Group of 5
Software used : QGIS, AutoCAD, Photoshop, Illustrator, Sketchup, Lumion
6 01
7
10 Mapping Existing Settlements
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Methodology
Perception based Mapping of Visual Quality: Studying the Intangibles
The study was based on Perception Based Mapping of Visual Quality. It was done with the help of actual street images.
4 key elements affecting the visual quality of streets, including the building frontage, greenery, sky view, pedestrian space, and motorization were considered.
All the parameters were graded on a 1 to 5 scale.
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GIS Workflow
Greenery
Sky View Factor
Building Frontage
Visual Quality on a scale of 1 to 5 w.r.t. the following parameters
Motorization
Overall Visual Quality
Heat Maps showcasing Visual Quality for different aspects in TT Nagar, Bhopal
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The Process
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Devolution of Dwelling Units
Dwelling Units
16 Type Area per DU (sqm.) No. of DU Floor Plate Area No of DU per Floor Total no of Floors Total no. of Buildings 8 8 10 10 40 2/ 1 160 2 80 2/ 1 220 2 48 1 72 1 638 O1 C 450 450 1 1 O2 D 350 350 1 1 O3 E 140 875 4 13/ 14 O4 F&G 120 750 4 20 O5 Affordable 90 1000 6 10/5 O6 H&I 80 800 6 20 O7 K2 90 1000 6 6 O8 K1 60 1100 8 12 Type Area per DU (sqm ) No. of DU Floor Plate Area No of DU per Floor Total no of Floors Total no. of Buildings 120 2 720 1 /2 /4 720 1/ 1/3/ 1/ 1 588 5 440 5 60 1 2648 P1 Affordable 90 1000 6 10 P2 2BHK 140 1404 6 10/ 15/20 P3 2BHK (Luxury) 170 2124 6 20/ 18/ 15/ 1 2/ 10 P4 3BHK 180 2210 6 20 P5 3BHK (Luxury) 210 1225 4 22 P6 4BHK 225 1600 4 15
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18 Site Plan
19 Building Typologies Map O1 O2 O3 O4 O5 O6 O7 O8 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6
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Section AA’
Section BB’
Section CC’
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XX’
Section
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View showing the New Scape: Redensified area with preserved greens
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Centrally Located Neighborhood Market
Understanding Urban Networks and Ecology of Peri-Urban Areas: A case of Laharpur, Bhopal
Urban Networks and Systems-I
Program : Peri-Urban areas offer a mix of rural and urban characteristics. Laharpur is one such area, which also happens to be ecologically rich. Home to hundreds of species of flora and fauna, the Laharpur Biodiversity Park is also a tourist spot. The area’s evolution began with the ribbon development along the Katara Hills main road connecting Hoshangabad Road to Laharpur. The motto of the exercise was to understand the urban networks, ecological layers and their intersection in this peri-urban area. In the end, as a synthesis of the study, recommendations/ proposals for preserving its ecological character were needed.
Location : Laharpur, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
Area: 675 hectares
Type : Group of 3
Software used : AutoCAD, QGIS, Photoshop, Illustrator, Sketchup, InDesign
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Evolution over the years
Decoding the greens and built form of Laharpur, Bhopal Housing
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Greens
Gated Communities
Marshy lands
Neighborhood Parks
Agricultural Fields Biodiversity Park Cricket Ground
Bungalows Semi-Detached
The Self-Made: ‘Kachi Basti’
2002 2005 2009 2019 2015 2013
“Neeche Dukan, Upar Makaan”
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Buildable Area as against existing Built Mass
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Slope Analysis
03.1
Interpreting Keywords describing the Public Realm
Urban Design Methods and Techniques
Exercise : Choosing a writeup that discusses the Public Realm, followed by thoughtfully choosing keywords. Thereafter, interpreting the same in a suitable area in Bhopal.
“
From being overlooked as residual spaces of architectural creations, the public realm is now being recognised for what it really is – an amalgamator of human potential, an equaliser of social disparity, a driver of real estate value, a benchmark of community pride and even a peek into a culture.
The chaos of the realm can be a source of entertainment, provide solace, a platform or a voice even as homelessness, public ablutions and settling of scores can blur the lines between private and public.
~A Place for all: A study in the great wide Public Realm by
Freddie Ribeiro
Location : Upper Lake, Bhopal
Type : Individual
Software used : Photoshop, InDesign
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”
INTERPRETING KEYWORDS URBAN DESIGN METHODS MAPPING ACTIVITY
37 KEYWORDS DESCRIBING THE PUBLIC REALM METHODS AND TECHNIQUES RAVJYOT KAUR 2022MUD008 SCHOOL OF PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURE, 1ST YEAR, 1ST SEM, M.ARCH (URBAN DESIGN PATTERNS as per USER GROUP
03.2
Interpreting Phrases from Matthew Frederick and Vikas Mehta’s book: 101
Things I Learned in Urban Design School
Urban Design Methods and Techniques
Exercise : Choosing a phrase from the book
101 Things I Learned in Urban Design School. Thereafter, chosing an area/ precinct in Bhopal whereby the phrase can be applied suitably.
Location : 10 No. Market, Bhopal
Type : Individual
Software used : Photoshop, InDesign
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PUBLIC REALMORDINARY LIFE ISN’T BORING.
The GREAT GOOD PLACE
‘‘Cafes, Coffee Shops, Community Centers, Beauty Parlors, General Stores, Bars, Hangouts, and How They Get You Through the Day
The Great Good Place, by Ray Oldenburg, 1989
“ Ordinary life isn’t boring. ”
ORDINARY ≠ BORING
2.
PUBLIC REALMORDINARY LIFE ISN’T BORING.
3.
WORK
PUBLIC REALMORDINARY LIFE ISN’T BORING.
10 No. Market, Bhopal
The GREAT GOOD PLACE
Coffee Shops, Community Centers, Parlors, General Stores, Bars, Hangouts, They Get You Through the Day.’’
Great Good Place, by Ray Oldenburg, 1989
The core setting of Informal Public Life
SECOND PLACE COMMUNITY
MAPPING ACTIVITIES OF THE THIRD LAYER
The GREAT GOOD PLACE
THIRD PLACE
COMMUNITY HANGOUTS
‘‘Cafes, Coffee Shops, Community Centers, Beauty Parlors, General Stores, Bars, Hangouts, and How They Get You Through the Day.’’
The Great Good Place, by Ray Oldenburg, 1989
ORDINARY ≠ BORING
1.
2.
HOME
1.
DISTINCT FROM HOME AND WORK
2.
WORK
ORDINARY HOME
FIRST PLACE
SECOND
MAPPING ACTIVITIES OF THE THIRD LAYER
10 No. Market, Bhopal
FIRST PLACE WORK
3.
SECOND PLACE COMMUNITY
THIRD PLACE
COMMUNITY HANGOUTS DISTINCT FROM HOME AND WORK
MAPPING ACTIVITIES OF THE THIRD LAYER
Market, Bhopal
setting of Informal
Street life is ordinary life observed by people with Time to Kill
The core setting of Informal Public Life
the Physical Centre around which we center our comings and goings
A. The layer called ‘Home’
FREDERICK AND VIKAS MEHTA’S THINGS I LEARNED IN URBAN DESIGN SCHOOL
Street life is ordinary life observed by people with Time to Kill
The truest urban culture lies not in special events, but in the buzz of activity that enlivens some streets and districts unusual is going on
the Physical Centre around which we center our comings and goings B. Work, transit, and daily Urban
’’
The truest urban culture the buzz of activity that enlivens
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INTERPRETING PHRASES FROM MATTHEW
RAVJYOT KAUR 2022MUD008 SCHOOL OF PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURE, BHOPAL 1ST YEAR, 1ST SEM, M.ARCH
DESIGN
(URBAN
‘‘
Urban Residents generating primary activity by Shopping
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C. The commute to ‘work’. Urban Life.
04 Miscellaneous
Structural Details: Floating Deck
Structural Details: Temporary Structure
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Cannes
Writing about Cities: Personal Essay
Punjabi Refugee Colony, Sion, Mumbai
The partition of India and Pakistan is often regarded as one of the most extensive migrations in the history of humankind. Henceforth, it isn’t wondrous that the partition has been a recurring theme in the literary work of many writers.
From the instant I learnt that the City of Dreams houses a Punjabi Refugee Colony, I felt much more than a strong urge to experience the place. On one fine Saturday in February 2021, I decided to travel to Sion from Worli, where I lived. Getting on the Mumbai local was out of the question due to the CoVID restrictions. Hence, I merrily opted for a kaali-peeli until Bandra and then hopped onto an autorickshaw, where I got to do my favorite thing: watch the meter change numbers!
The Punjabi refugee colony is located in Sion, Central Mumbai, a lively neighborhood northeast of Dadar. Also known as GTB Nagar (Guru Teg Bahadur Nagar, if you ask a Punjabi about it, they will tell you with the biggest and brightest smile on their just lit-up face that they have lovingly christened it Mini Punjab and prefer to call it that! The inhabitants here are mainly Punjabi Hindu and Sikh refugees who relocated to this land from Pakistan. While they had to kiss goodbye to their homeland, the tales in their heart, their upbringing, and all things intangible moved with them to Bombay. Even today, these partition stories pervade the air here.
Within a minute of getting down from the autorickshaw, I had already spotted women adorning salwar suits and men dressed in crisp white kurta pajamas and colorful turbans, as is typical of followers of the Sikh faith. Perhaps they would have had them stitched at the Colony’s tiny tailor shop. To explore and understand how life looks for these residents today, I chose to walk to the Dashmesh Darbar Gurudwara in the hope of overhearing conversations post the evening prayers.
Heading towards the holy shrine, I caught sight of some informal vendors selling sought-after banta soda. I could see some more permanent shops selling nitty gritties used in Sikh households. Situated close to the Gurudwara, these shops offer items such as kadas (a steel bracelet worn by people of the Sikh faith), hair fixers, turbans, phulkari chunnis, spices, and masalas used in typical North Indian cuisine. On my trip to one of these shops, where I halted to get a new kada, I could hear a lady ask for Rajmah and Punjabi Chole Masala in her slightly Punjabi accent, unlike the voices I was accustomed to hearing. A shaded walkway with a trussed roof led me to the holy building’s white marble steps. The almost G+2 structure boosts a simple yet very inviting facade. I walked upstairs, did my prayers, read some sacred chants, and walked outside the darbar. As I inferred about the history of the same from the incharge sitting at the entrance, I learnt that the Gurudwara was built to extend help to the victims of the 1968 Koyna earthquake.
Surrounded by slums and tucked in a backdrop that speaks of immense disparity from sky-kissing buildings to tiny slums, the Refugee Colony is a world of its own! Many food walks are synonymous with Sion. Unsurprisingly, a food blogger acquaintance recommended I visit Sion for good Punjabi cuisine, further strengthening my resolve to let my taste buds witness the same. As one walks past the unavoidable and enticing aroma of tandoori chicken, one can sense that what the workers and owners of these famous food joints have managed to retain goes beyond a source of income or a meal! Getting interviewed by a bunch of journalism students, the owner of one of these food joints, with the slightest change of expression, began to narrate the tale that many asked him about. He mentioned that the Punjabis from Pakistan, particularly those with no relatives in North India, chose to board the train to Bombay. It was in 1957 that the government allotted the refugees 360 sq. ft houses each. In about 25 buildings,
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the then government explicitly prepared 1200 apartments for housing over 1200 refugee families. While the per sq. ft price in the 1960s in Sion was something like 14-15 rupees, today, the same sq. ft easily cost between 20,000 to 30,000 rupees or even more.
Today, declared dilapidated by the BMC, these buildings have been vacated because they have lived their life and are now beyond habitation. A notice on a modest-sized flyer written in Marathi hangs outside a rusted metal gate and reads that the buildings are dilapidated; hence one must not go near them. While the inhabitants have vacated and relocated to other areas in Mumbai and even abroad and are now paying heavy rents, it is still undecided who will redevelop the area. I could hear a 30-year-old describing the saga of the redevelopment of their Colony was well something that they have heard from their childhood, but the actionable part of it is yet to happen. Living here for decades, these families have even witnessed the transition from Bombay to Mumbai in 1995 but are now clueless about what the future holds for them.
Mumbai may be one of the world’s most populous cities, but it always welcomes everyone with open arms, and before you know it, you’ve fallen in love with the city. Immigrants from around the world populate Mumbai, significantly strengthening and enriching its fabric.
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