logo
Indian town's abandoned European-style mansions are a throwback to its opulent past

Indian town's abandoned European-style mansions are a throwback to its opulent past

Saudi Gazette11-03-2025

SIDHPUR, India — The dusty highway leading to Sidhpur, in western India's Gujarat state, winds through arid landscapes past roadside eateries and herds of lumbering camel, offering little hint of what the historic town holds.
In the heart of Sidhpur lies a street lined with stately three- and four-story mansions, known as 'havelis,' in a fading palette of rainbow pastel shades, from teal and baby pink to pistachio green. Known locally as Paris Galli, or Paris Street, it transports visitors to a European city with grand Neoclassical architecture and a harmonious melange of Art Deco, Baroque and hybrid Indian styles.
Sidhpur is less than three hours' drive from Gujarat's capital Ahmedabad, but it remains under the radar of travelers and architecture enthusiasts. On the day of my visit, the neighborhood around Paris Galli appeared largely deserted, except for occasional passersby in the distinctive colored hijabs and gold and white caps worn by the Dawoodi Bohras, a Shia Muslim sect that first settled in this part of western India in the 11th century.
The Bohras are a close-knit trading community that originated in Egypt and later traveled around North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia to trade in spices, gems and perfumes. The sect's seat was later moved from Yemen to Sidhpur, where its followers showcased their prosperity and wealth by building hundreds of opulent residences in the first half of the 20th century. These housing clusters were called Bohrawads or Vohrawads, and the mansions' owners tried to outdo one another with chandeliers, Belgian glass and antique furniture, or by hosting grand dinners.
The community's close trading connections with Europe may have influenced its architectural sensibilities. The region's maharaja at the time, Sayajirao Gaekwad III, was also known to be fond of European architecture. He laid out strict planning rules, inspired by Scottish urban planner Patrick Geddes (who lived in India between 1914 and 1924), that resulted in strikingly uniform streetscapes, according to Sidhpur-born architect Zoyab A. Kadi.
'The Bohras extended their help to other communities during a famine in the early 1900s, and (in return) the Maharaja of Baroda gifted them a tract of land, as they were facing a housing shortage,' he said. 'It was on this land that they started building these magnificent edifices, which had to adhere to strict town planning rules.'
Found mostly in Najampura district, where Paris Galli is located, the long, narrow mansions are made mainly of wood (the material's flexibility is an advantage in earthquake-prone regions) in addition to plaster and brick. The designs feature gabled roofs, pilasters and columns, carved doors and ornate overhanging 'jharokha' windows that protrude from the front of each mansion. The main living floor is located above street level over a basement; stepped plinths, or 'otlas,' act like porches and were traditionally used as social spaces; whimsical monograms, featuring family initials or surnames in English, are often displayed on the buildings' facades.
'The courtyard houses, built in rows or sequence, exhibit rhythm with diversity,' said Ahmedabad-based conservation architect, Ashish Trambadia, over the phone. 'While each house has a unique color scheme, unique stucco art and grill work; the precise alignment of plinths, roof lines and floor lines gave the streets a unique character.'
India-based photographer Sebastian Cortés documented the town and its people in his series 'Sidhpur: Time Present Time Past.' The images present a certain melancholy, from the faded glory of the mansions' interiors to the women pictured gazing out of windows as they carry out household chores.
'I was inspired by the mercantile communities of India... who displayed their wealth most aesthetically,' said New York-born Cortés in a phone interview. 'This was inverse colonialism: The Bohras traveled around the world to countries like Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Yemen and Ethiopia, and brought back various influences and then blended it with their own customs and traditions, using local artisans to create magic.'
Kadi has also helped bring international attention to the houses by authoring three books about the town: 'Sidhpur and Its Dawoodi Bohra Houses,' 'The Vohrawaads of Sidhpur' and 'The Birth and Death of a Style.'
'At casual glance, the streetscape looks European, but if you look closely there's the Gujarati tradition of using wood as a building material, and the capitals (crowns of columns or pilasters) are neither Corinthian or Doric but hybrid — a product of various influences,' said Kadi, who now runs an architectural firm in Chennai. 'Many of the houses were designed to give women privacy, as most of the men were abroad working hard and making money. (The homes are) also suited to the local weather, in terms of design and materials used.'
The houses' names, like Zainab Mansion and Kagalwala Manor, often reference the people who once lived there. There are showstoppers, like the Zaveri house (also known as the House with 365 Windows) which is now stained black with grit, its grand pilasters and geometric facade carvings in dire need of restoration, and the Teen Khuniya (or Three-Cornered House), with its distinctive triangular layout.
According to local resident and tour guide Insiya Bangalorewalla, the homes were typically divided into five linear sections: the 'dehli' (a service area), the 'chowk' (a central courtyard kitchen and bathroom, open to the sky for light and, today, ventilation fitted with grilles), the outer 'pursaal' (a multipurpose room for living and dining), the inner 'pursaal' (the coolest room, used as a bedroom) and the orda (the best room in the house, well-furnished and used by the head of the family).
'From the street you can't see into the house thanks to a veil called the 'furtaal,' which protected the privacy of the women,' added Bangalorewalla on a tour through Najampura.
The homes' interiors were often a visual feast decorated with geometric tiles, friezes, Persian carpets, dark mahogany and rosewood furniture, painted Belgian mirrors, antique corner pieces, family memorabilia and a special marble recess meant for storing water (water has an important status in Islam, and is used to cleanse or purify the home).
'Sidhpur's architecture is very unique,' said Kadi, 'as the buildings inspired by Western ideas and elements have been crafted by Hindu architects (but) are suited to an Islamic way of life.'
Official town figures suggest that, in the 1970s, there were at least 1,400 of the mansions across Sidhpur. But after India gained independence from Britain in 1947, many of Sidhpur's residents migrated overseas, or to larger Indian cities like Mumbai and Ahmedabad, leaving the houses' upkeep to caretakers or relatives.
Today, many are boarded up, lying forlorn and derelict or caught in legal tangles between former owners' descendants; others have been demolished to make way for modern developments, with the antiques and timber sold off by owners. The official data suggests that fewer than 400 of Sidhpur's havelis are currently inhabited.
To help conserve the disappearing mansions, Kadi, along with others from Sidhpur, co-founded the Sidhpur Heritage Collective in 2024. The group is working to document the town's architecture, as well as holding workshops and guided tours.
'Unfortunately, there are no heritage laws in India that prevent demolition of (privately owned) houses,' said Kadi. 'We also have no funds or body helping us in this project. Even converting these houses into homestays and Airbnbs has not yet taken off.
'(Sidhpur) has a lot to offer besides just these mansions, from a rich food culture to temples and mosques. I can only hope that we manage to save the town's architecture before it's destroyed forever. This needs public will and funding.' — CNN

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American Climber Dies on World's Fifth-highest Peak in Nepal
American Climber Dies on World's Fifth-highest Peak in Nepal

Asharq Al-Awsat

time06-05-2025

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

American Climber Dies on World's Fifth-highest Peak in Nepal

Spain Foreign Tourist Numbers Break Record in Early 2025 FILE PHOTO: Tourists tour along the Puente Nuevo (New Bridge) on a hot summer day in Ronda, Spain July 4, 2023. REUTERS/Jon Nazca/File Photo Spain welcomed a record 17 million foreign tourists in the first three months of 2025 as the buoyant sector drives an economy outshining European peers, official data showed on Monday. The 17.1 million foreign tourists arriving in Spain from January to March was a 5.7-percent increase on the same period in 2024, the National Statistics Institute said. Britain, France and Germany supplied the most holidaymakers to the world's second most-visited country, which last year hosted a record 94 million foreign tourists seeking its sun, beaches and culture, AFP reported. Spending by foreign tourists also climbed 7.2 percent to 23.5 billion euros ($26.7 billion), the tourism ministry said in a statement, a welcome development for the government which wants visitors to splash more cash during their stay. The tourist sector was one of the drivers of Spain's standout growth of 3.2 percent in 2024, well above the EU figure of one percent. But the bonanza has sparked a growing backlash among locals who complain that an unsustainable influx of foreign visitors is driving up rents, saturating infrastructure and changing the fabric of neighborhoods. Spain aims to "diversify" destinations, make the sector less dependent on key seasons and "share out the benefits" across the country, Tourism Minister Jordi Hereu said in a statement.

Spain Foreign Tourist Numbers Break Record in Early 2025
Spain Foreign Tourist Numbers Break Record in Early 2025

Asharq Al-Awsat

time06-05-2025

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Spain Foreign Tourist Numbers Break Record in Early 2025

Spain welcomed a record 17 million foreign tourists in the first three months of 2025 as the buoyant sector drives an economy outshining European peers, official data showed on Monday. The 17.1 million foreign tourists arriving in Spain from January to March was a 5.7-percent increase on the same period in 2024, the National Statistics Institute said. Britain, France and Germany supplied the most holidaymakers to the world's second most-visited country, which last year hosted a record 94 million foreign tourists seeking its sun, beaches and culture, AFP reported. Spending by foreign tourists also climbed 7.2 percent to 23.5 billion euros ($26.7 billion), the tourism ministry said in a statement, a welcome development for the government which wants visitors to splash more cash during their stay. The tourist sector was one of the drivers of Spain's standout growth of 3.2 percent in 2024, well above the EU figure of one percent. But the bonanza has sparked a growing backlash among locals who complain that an unsustainable influx of foreign visitors is driving up rents, saturating infrastructure and changing the fabric of neighborhoods. Spain aims to "diversify" destinations, make the sector less dependent on key seasons and "share out the benefits" across the country, Tourism Minister Jordi Hereu said in a statement.

A story of stone: How Jabal Al-Qarah shapes the soul of Hofuf
A story of stone: How Jabal Al-Qarah shapes the soul of Hofuf

Arab News

time02-05-2025

  • Arab News

A story of stone: How Jabal Al-Qarah shapes the soul of Hofuf

DAMMAM: Near Hofuf, at the edge of Al-Ahsa Oasis, where the palms thin out and the desert hushes before turning to stone, Jabal Al-Qarah rises. Low and wide, its sculpted sandstone flanks have been worn into curves and fissures. For the latest updates, follow us on Instagram @ I first saw the mountain just after dawn as the road, having coiled gently through date groves and irrigation canals, veers toward the open plain. In the distance, the mountain appeared — not dramatically, but deliberately. A long, earthen body stretching across the landscape, its folds catching light like the surface of an old parchment. 'This is not a mountain in the European sense,' local historian Salman Al-Habib told me, his hand resting on the stone. 'It's not for conquest. It's for shelter. For memory. It held the lives of our grandparents — sometimes literally.' He was referring to the caves that run deep into the heart of Jabal Al-Qarah. Stepping inside one, you feel the temperature drop immediately. It's very still, and the acoustics are strange. Sounds stretch and settle. ' They say Judas Iscariot wandered in and was never seen again,' Al-Habib said. 'Others say a goddess lived here. The mountain listens. It holds everything.' The caves have served a multitude of purposes: storing grain, sheltering travelers, even childbirth. The temperature, remarkably constant year-round, made the mountain a natural refuge. 'Before fans or air conditioning, this was how we survived,' said Al-Habib. 'We didn't fight the climate — we listened to the land.' Geologist Dr. Layla Al-Shemmari echoed that sentiment. 'The mountain is formed of calcareous sandstone and marl, deposited millions of years ago,' she explained. 'Its structure naturally insulates, naturally ventilates. The people mirrored that in their homes — thick-walled, inward-facing, mudbrick construction pulled straight from the land.' She ran her hand along the cave wall, where moisture clung faintly even in the dry season. 'The stone taught us architecture. It taught us how to live without taking too much.' But perhaps the most unexpected moment came just outside the caves, at dusk. A minaret stood in the shadow of the mountain, its golden tiles catching the final light. Behind it, the rock face glowed a soft amber, every crack and crevice thrown into relief, like a thousand sleeping figures stacked into one colossal wall. The call to prayer began, and something uncanny happened: the rock didn't reflect the sound — it held it. The echo lingered, cradled by stone. 'When I was young,' Al-Habib said quietly, 'I believed the mountain was repeating the prayer. That it wanted to join in.' UNESCO's 2018 recognition of the Al-Ahsa Oasis — of which Jabal Al-Qarah is a vital part — has brought conservation efforts and guided tours. But many locals say the real work is remembering. Not preserving the mountain like a fossil, but allowing it to continue what it has always done: listening, absorbing, reminding, providing. 'If these rocks could speak, they wouldn't lecture,' Al-Habib said. 'They'd ask us why we stopped listening.' And maybe that's what the mountain is doing: waiting, patiently, for silence to return, so that its stories, etched into sandstone and shade, might be heard again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store