Nagar Bhaban

Municipal office in Dhaka, Bangladesh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nagar Bhaban (Bengali: নগর ভবন) is a building in Dhaka, Bangladesh similar to Town hall that houses the headquarters of Dhaka South City Corporation. The building previously housed the offices of the Dhaka City Corporation prior to the bifurcation of Dhaka as a result of the Local Government (City Corporation) Amendment Act 2011. The building is situated near the University of Dhaka campus and adjacent to the Bangladesh Police headquarters.[1]

StatusFunctioning
LocationDhaka, Bangladesh
Coordinates23.7239°N 90.4085°E / 23.7239; 90.4085
Quick facts General information, Status ...
Nagar Bhaban
নগর ভবন
Nagar Bhaban, located in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Nagar Bhaban is located in Dhaka
Nagar Bhaban
Location within Dhaka
General information
StatusFunctioning
TypeCity Hall
LocationDhaka, Bangladesh
Coordinates23.7239°N 90.4085°E / 23.7239; 90.4085
Opened1995; 31 years ago (1995)
OwnerDhaka South City Corporation (2011-present)
Dhaka City Corporation (1995-2011)
Technical details
Floor area483,000 m2 (5,200,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
ArchitectsA. Imamuddin
Lailun Nahar Ekram
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Architecture

The building was designed by A. Imamuddin and Lailun Nahar Ekram, and was completed in 1995. It is a 15-storey city hall building containing offices, a bank, meeting rooms, a museum, dining facilities, a prayer hall, the mayor's office, and public terraces. The building has huge columns and arched gateways at its entrance and in the rear. There are two clocks at the top of the building on the north and south face. The building has a finished concrete texture, which gives it a timeless appearance and keeps maintenance cost low. The garden in front helps one to have a better view of the building.[citation needed]

The building is symmetrical in plan. Architects Qazi Azizul Mowla and A.T.M. Masood Reza wrote:

Nagar Bhaban is the result of a philosophy of assimilation and reflects a contemporary trend of rustic regionalism. In this building, elements from the colonial past have been freely employed. The facade articulation, proportioning system, symmetricity, monumentality etc. in this building represent a modernized version of colonial architecture - a symbol of imperial power.[2]

References

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