Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala

Dolma Ling Nunnery at Dharamshala – M.N. Ashish Ganju

The project sponsored by the Tibetan Women’s Association, was executed as an exercise in self-build by the user community. The design was worked out in close consultation with the users, and in keeping with Buddhist principles of harmonious interdependence of all living being and objects.
Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala
Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala
Verandahs flanking the assembly courtyard

In the last two decades the work has increased in cultural diversity with the design and construction of a monastery for Tibetan refugee Nuns in Dharamsala in the Kangra Valley. The project sponsored by the Tibetan Women’s Association, was executed as an exercise in self-build by the user community. The design was worked out in close consultation with the users, and in keeping with Buddhist principles of harmonious interdependence of all living being and objects.

Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala

The construction, including materials and labour, was managed by the user community. This exercise which started nearly twenty years ago, and still continues, has provided a home for nearly 300 refugee nuns, and includes residential, academic, cultural, and primary health care facilities. This project, especially, has strengthened our belief in the innate capacity of humankind, and the marginalized, to find order in nature. Professional people only need to provide expertise to catalyse and guide this effort, and to help make it an everyday feature of the human condition.

 

Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala
Nuns Housing Terraces

Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala Dolma Ling Nunnery, Dharamshala

The ground plan of the Nunnery was conceived to generate a built-open space pattern which allows the indoor spaces to be naturally lit and  ventilated, to receive maximum solar radiation through the winter, and provide a network of circulation spaces which allow all-weather movement throughout the building complex. The design principles generate low-rise structures with maximum load-bearing walls, compact space planning integrated with open spaces, materials chosen for low embodied energy and maximum resistance to weather and climate impact, construction techniques which could be understood and managed by local artisans and maintained effectively by the inhabitants. This resulted in construction costs being reduced by at least one third as compared with conventional construction while providing much improved environmental performance. The carbon footprint of the project is also reduced to an absolute minimum.

More Photos:

The architectural expression is a blend of the imperatives of the site, being the Kangra Valley which is one of the rainiest places in India, and the memory of the colourful, decorated buildings the Tibetans left behind in their homeland. The Buddhist ethos of interdependence of all living forms is the overriding arbiter of aesthetic expression. Site topography, climate, open and built space pattern, and the harmonious blending of several cultures generates the architectural quality and experience. In essence the architecture seeks to be a model of the cosmos predicated on ecological and universal responsibility.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent

Folles de la Salpétrière, (Cour des agitées.) (Madwomen of the Salpétrière. (Courtyard of the mentally disturbed.))

Gender. Hysteria. Architecture. | “How Did a Diagnosis Learn to Draw Walls?”

Did these spaces heal women or teach them how to disappear? Aditi A., through her research study as a part of the CEPT Writing Architecture course, in this chapter follows hysteria as it migrates from text to typology, inquiring how architectural decisions came to stand in for care itself. Rather than assuming architecture responded to illness, the inquiry turns the question around: did architecture help produce the vulnerability it claimed to manage?

Read More »
Gender, Hysteria, and Architecture - The Witch Hunt. Henry Ossawa Tanner. Source - Wikiart

Gender. Hysteria. Architecture. | “When Did Care Become Confinement?”

Was architecture used by society to spatially “manage” women and their autonomy? Aditi A., through her research study as a part of the CEPT Writing Architecture course, examines the period before psychiatry, when fear had already become architectural, tracing how women’s autonomy was spatially managed through domestic regulation, witch hunts, informal confinement, and early institutional planning.

Read More »

A Modernist’s Doubt: Symbolism and the Late Career Turn

Why did acclaimed modernist architects suddenly introduce historical symbolism like arches, decorative elements, and other cultural references into their work after decades of disciplined restraint? Sudipto Ghosh interrogates this 1980s-90s symbolic turn as a rupture in architecture, questioning whether this represents an authentic reconnection with content and memory, or is it a mere superficial gesture towards absent meanings. Drawing from Heidegger’s analysis of the Greek temple, he distinguishes two modes of architectural representation, ultimately judging that this turn was a nascent rebellion against modernism that may have failed to achieve genuine integration of context, material, and memory.

Read More »
Ode to Pune - A Vision. © Narendra Dengle - 1

The City That Could Be: An Ode to Pune

Narendra Dengle, through his poem written in January 2006, presents a deep utopic vision for Pune—what the city could be as an ecologically sustainable, equitable city that balances nature with development. He sets ambitious benchmarks for prioritizing public transport over cars, preserving heritage, addressing slum rehabilitation humanely, and empowering local communities

Read More »

Featured Publications

New Release

We Are Hiring

Stories that provoke enquiry into built environment

www.architecture.live

Subscribe & Join a Community of Lakhs of Readers