Dhaka City, by the end of the 19th
century, was hemmed in between the Burhiganga River and the railway
line. The extension of the city to the east went up to the eastern
fringes of Gandaria and to the west up to
Nawabganj.
But a phase of revival came when
Charles Dawes, the Collector, began to take interest in the
development of Dhaka City. He laid out the RaceCourse in Ramna in
1825. Subsequently in 1829, some roads within the city were widened
and new buildings were erected for administrative and educational
purposes near the present Victoria Park.
Finally with the transfer of power
from the East India Company to the Crown in 1858, Dhaka started to
grow more rapidly.
Dhaka was connected for the first
time with Narayanganj by railways in 1885 and later in 1886 the
railways extended up to Mymensingh. Dhaka City was for the first
time electrified in 1878 and facilities of water supply started to
be offered to the residences since 1874. The development of the
city continued and later during the Governor Generalship of Lord
Curzon, Bengal was partitioned and a new province of East Bengal
and Assam came into being in July 1905. Dhaka was declared the
provincial capital. With the new responsibilities, the town of less
than 100,000 inhabitants started to expand rapidly. The increase of
population between 1901 and 1911 was about 21 percent. But Dhaka’s
phase as Capital of East Bangal and Assam was only short lived. In
1911, the Partition of Bengal was annulled and Dhaka once again
lost its administrative robes. As a compensation, Dhaka University
was established and the administrative buildings were utilized for
housing it. But due to the First World War the functioning of the
University was delayed until 1921. From that time till 1947, Dhaka
City functioned as a district headquarters, trade centre and
university town. The main development took place in Raman area.
During the long period of over 180 years under the East India
Company and the British Crown, the functional pattern of Dhaka City
underwent marked changes.
Functional Pattern Administrative.
The Fort, which during the Mughal times formed the administrative
nucleus, was turned into a jail by the British. The new
administrative district grew up near the Victoria Park, which was
established, in the first half of the 19th century. The educational
institutions also were located there. For these purposes the
low-lying areas between the former headquarters of the East India
Company and Dulai Khal were reclaimed. After 1905, the centre of
principal administration of the capital city was located in Ramna.
The present Medical College Hospital housed the provincial
Secretariat. But the headquarters of the district administration
continued to be located near Victoria Park. Thus two centres of
administration were to be identified. But after the annulment of
the Partition of Bengal, Ramna area lost he administrative
functions.
Educational. The principal centre of
education until 1905 was located near the Victoria Park. But after
that an important and more expansive centre of educational
institutions was established in Ramna. The Ahsanullah Engineering
School was also built in Ramna. The Dhaka University was created
and it took over the previous secretariat buildings and the Curzon
Hall. The Government House was turned into Dhaka Intermediate
College and many residential halls for students were constructed in
this area. By the early 1920s the important part of Ramna was thus
occupied by educational institutions.
Business. The East India Company had
inherited a well-developed central business district in the Chauk,
which gradually changed its identity from a retail trade centre to
a wholesale centre. By 1930, it had completely become a wholesale
area. The retail trade area on the other hand moved eastward along
Islampur and then northward along Nawabpur Road. They have retained
their character until today. Bangla Bazar also re-developed as a
retail-trading centre in the later part of the British rule. During
the Mughals it rivaled with Chauk as a business centre, but during
the early British period it lost the commercial importance and
became a seat for such institutions as the North Brook Hall and the
Baptist Mission.
Industries. The industrial district,
as in the Mughal period, was associated with the low class
residential areas. Shell cutting was carried on the Sankhari Bazar,
brass and metal work in Thateri Bazar, gold and silver work and
weaving in Tanti Bazar. During the later part of the British rule
in the 20th century a small number of large-scale industries were
established. One of them was a glass factory (Hardeo) established
in 1929 at Hatkhola railway crossing. A pharmaceutical industry,
Sadhana Ausodhalaya was also established in this period in
Gandaria.
Low Class Residences. The low class
residences of the Mughal times continued to be low class and
expanded to swallow some parts of the surrounding areas. Some
high-class areas like Nawabganj also deteriorated to low class. The
cause of the demotion of Nawabganj to low class was the shifting of
the river southward.
Middle Class Residences. The
emergence of a middle class social stratum and with that of middle
class residential area was a 19th century phenomenon. Such areas
with middle class characteristics were located mainly at Bakshi
Bazar. Dewan Bazar, Nawab Katra, Aga Sadeq Road, Begum Bazar,
Armanitola, Bangla Bazar and Lakshmi Bazar. Later on Gopibagh area
was also added to the list of middle class areas. These areas were
primarily inhabited by local people of respectable means. The
middle class houses, which varied from plain small buildings
standing, shoulder to shoulder along a long street to considerably
large houses with gardens and open spaces.
High Class Residential Areas
Location Pattern. Ever since the
Mughal times, the riverbank was a prize location for high-class
residences. The charm of the riverfront continued up to the
beginning of the present century and the most important high-class
residential areas at the bank of the Burhiganga River for half a
mile from North Brook Hall to the Ahsan Manzil. High European civil
officers used to live there. Apart from the picturesque waterfront
location, this residential area also enjoyed proximity to the main
administrative centre at Victoria Park. The Palace of Dhaka Nawabs
(Ahsan Manzil) was also located there. The establishment of the
Capital of the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam in Dhaka in
1906 brought the development of the Civil Lines in Ramna Area
beyond the city limits. The Civil Lines were not only the
administrative centre but also the official residences of the
administrative heads. The Europeans gradually moved from the
riverside to the new residential area in Ramna. This movement was
initiated not only by the development of the Civil Lines but also
by the growing demand of space for commercial purposes. By 1930,
the riverfront lost its residential character and was changed into
a commercial area.
Three upper class residential areas
at Gandaria, Wari and purana Paltan were developed by the local
population. Gandaria was located at the southeastern outskirt of
the city and Wari in a sparsely populated area east to Nawabpur
Road, They housed the Local Government employees (most of whom had
also other landed property), professionals, businessmen and
landlords. Until 1925, Purana Paltan was a barren woodland with a
few houses built of corrugated iron sheets. In a few years after
1925, Purana Paltan became a beautiful residential area housing the
leaders of the society and high government officials (Bose
1950).
Road Pattern. The layout of the Ramna
area consists of two roughly concentric roads at the centre of
which is the RaceCourse. To the south is a somewhat irregular road
pattern which serves the main buildings while to the north-east are
a number of well planned parallel residential streets. The tree
planting and natural vegetation are excellent even by today’s
standard. The plan expresses the disregard for geometrical layout
of roads, which is one of the main characteristics of contemporary
town planning. The Ramna plan embodies transition from the
geometrical or classical to the informal or romantic. The roads,
however, became very wide (unknown in the old Dhaka) to cope with
the increasing vehicular traffic.
The gird pattern of road was
introduced in Dhaka City for the first time in Wari and Gandaria.
Roads in these areas were wider than those in the Mughal Dhaka but
not as wide as those of the Ramna Civil
Lines.
House Types. The European houses near
the waterfront were all done in western pattern. They had wide-open
compound spaces and gardens. The houses were massive in structure
with huge pillars and sometimes with round towers and verandas like
the Dutch kuthis at Wise Ghat. In one of the many institutions,
built by the Britishers before 1905, a juxtaposition of the Mughal
and European architectural styles was made. It was the Northbrook
Hall, built to serve the purpose of a Town
Hall.
The Ahsan Manzil was built first in
1872 and then renovated in 1888. Its architectural style is purely
European. It has pillars with Corinthian capitals and semicircular
arches in windows and doors. The dome also is of European character
and the Mughal kiosks are all gone. Instead of the high Mughal
Palace walls it has iron fencing, allowing thus a better view of
the palace from the river. The Nawabs, however, had a garden house
at Dilkhusha near the present Rajdhani Unnayan Kartipakkha (RAJUK)
or DIT building and now acquired for the development of commercial
areas. The short period between 1905 and 1911 witnessed a speedily
development of high-class residential areas in Ramna. These houses
were built there in western architectural style with large
compounds and gardens surrounded by hedge-fences. They maintained
the red colour like the Mughal buildings. The magnificent buildings
now housing the High Court and built in the Renaissance style was
the Governor’s residence. Opposite to it is the Curzon Hall of
equal grandeur (1905) but with Mughal architectural elements. The
residential houses in Ramna had the best available contemporary
living facilities. In construction design they had the peculiar
colonial look. But with these houses red brick began to appear
against the old Grey and also against the green foliage all around.
They were the “purple palaces of the public works contrasting
strangely with the graceful domes and minarets of mosques and
palaces of bygone age” (Birt 1906).
The
houses in Gandaria and Wari were large buildings with high and
thick compound walls and open spaces. Architecture showed
combination of Mughal and European styles. Verandas and more window
spaces were conspicuous features along with other characteristics.
The houses had water and electric connection. Houses in the Purana
Paltan resembled those in Wari and Gandaria but marks of
sophistication became evident in them. Gardens and lower compound
walls with similar architectural designs were associated with
decoration by exotic plants.