Rahul Mehrotra
John T Dunlop Professor in Housing & Urbanization, Graduate School of Design (GSD), Harvard University, USA and Principal, Rahul Mehrotra Associates, India
Rahul Mehrotra
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4th Holcim Forum “Economy of Sustainable Construction” - Mumbai, India
4th Holcim Forum in Mumbai, India 2013: Green Mobile workshop - Compact city: This workshop aims at analyzing what differentiations need to be made with respect to specificity of site and society when evaluating the scale and density of a city. Pictured (in cap): Workshop expert, Rahul Mehrotra.
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Global Holcim Foundation Awards 2012 jury
Werner Sobek (left), Director of the Institute for Lightweight Structures and Conceptual Design (ILEK) at the University of Stuttgart, Germany and Rahul Mehrotra, Principal, Rahul Mehrotra Associates, India at the Global Holcim Awards jury meeting in Zurich, 2012.
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Global Holcim Foundation Awards 2012 jury
Global Holcim Awards jury meeting 2012 in March 2012 in Zurich, Switzerland: Members of the Global Holcim Awards Jury 2012 (l-r): Rolf Soiron, Mario Botta, Maria Atkinson, Yolanda Kakabadse, Werner Sobek, Julia Marton-Lefèvre, Aaron Betsky, Enrique Norten (head), Hans-Rudolf Schalcher, Rahul Mehrotra.
Last updated: July 10, 2024 Cambridge, MA, USA & Mumbai, India
Rahul Mehrotra moderated the workshop “Informal Urbanism: Between sanctioned and shadow orders” at the 2nd Holcim Forum 2007 in Shanghai on “Urban_Trans_Formation”, and was a workshop presenter in “Compact city: Sustainable or just sustaining economic law?” at the 4th Holcim Forum 2013 in Mumbai on “Economy of Sustainable Construction”. He was a workshop expert on “Kumbh Mela in India, the world’s largest ‘disassemblabled’ city”, at the 5th Holcim Forum 2016 in Detroit dedicated to “Infrastructure Space”.
He is a practicing architect, urban designer, and educator. His firm, RMA Architects was founded in 1990 in Mumbai and has designed and executed projects for clients that include government and non-governmental agencies, corporate as well as private individuals and institutions.
RMA Architects has also initiated several unsolicited projects driven by the firm’s commitment to advocacy in the city of Mumbai. The firm has designed a software campus for Hewlett Packard in Bangalore, a campus for Magic Bus (a NGO that works with poor children), the restoration of the Chowmahalla Palace in Hyderabad, and with the Taj Mahal Conservation Collaborative (a conservation master plan for the Taj Mahal). The firm also worked on a social housing project for 100 elephants and their caretakers in Jaipur as well as a corporate office in Hyderabad and several stand-alone houses in different parts of India.
His current research involves looking at India’s medium size cities and the broader emergent patterns of urbanism in India: focused on evolving a theoretical framework for designing in conditions of informal growth – what he refers to as the “Kinetic City”. He has run several studios looking at various aspects of planning questions in the city of Mumbai, under the rubric of “Extreme Urbanism”.
He was James Marston Fitch Historic Preservationist in Residence at the American Academy in Rome (Sept/Oct 2016). The select group of artists, practitioners, and scholars gather to pursue their work in an atmosphere conducive to intellectual exchange and innovation.
Rahul Mehrotra studied at the School of Architecture, Ahmedabad (CEPT), India, and graduated with a master’s degree with distinction in Urban Design from the Harvard GSD. In 1995, he founded The Bombay Collaborative, an architectural conservation practice that also acts as a consultant to the Mumbai Environmental Action Group, INTACH, the Orient Foundation, and various neighborhood and citizens’ groups in Mumbai.
He was Associate Professor at the College of Architecture & Urban Planning at the University of Michigan, USA (2003-07), and has also taught at the School of Architecture & Urban Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, MA, USA (2007-10). Rahul Mehrotra was a member of the jury of the Aga Khan Prize for Architecture in 2004.
He has written and lectured extensively on architecture, conservation and urban planning issues related to Mumbai. He has co-authored Bombay: The Cities Within (Eminence, 2001), which covers the city’s urban history from the 1600s to the present; Banganga: Sacred Tank (Eminence, 1996); Public Places Bombay (Max Mueller Bhavan, 1996); Anchoring a City Line: The history of the Western Suburban Railway and its headquarters in Bombay, 1899-1999 (Eminence, 2000); and Bombay to Mumbai: Changing Perspectives (Marg, 1997); as well as Conserving an Image Center: The Fort Precinct in Bombay (Urban Research Design Institute). Based on this study and its recommendations, the historic Fort area was declared a conservation precinct in 1995.