Riporto di seguito alcune dichiarazioni rilasciate da Rahul Mehrotra, architetto ed urbanista, nonché docente all'università di Harvard.  L'intervista è stata pubblicata da The New York Times il 17 maggio 2012:
'At the macro level what is happening is very interesting because while  the intelligentsia and the élite are focusing on the seven or eight big  cities, the real urban time bomb are the 392 towns that make up the  larger landscape of India. These 392 towns currently contain  approximately 50.000 people each and are projected to grow up to 100.000  people that in 20 years might even be a million people. So potentially  between 250 and 400 million urban Indians will live in towns that are  not even on radars currently. (...) I think both the architecture and urban landscape of India has to  necessarily be one of pluralism because India is a multiethnic,  multicultural landscape and I think architecture and cities are the  physical expression of those aspirations. I don’t think we can go  the China way, where everything is made in a singular image; in the  mutinous democracy of India that’s going to be impossible. (...) For me personally, the two most important design moves [a Mumbai] are the sweep of  Marine Drive (...) and the other thing that is really emblematic aspect of the  city is Dharavi. (...) [Dharavi] it's also emblematic of the real inequities that exist in our cities and  that people have to create home for themselves without having their  basic needs fulfilled, and a total failure on the part of the government  to provide them housing. (...) I think in Mumbai in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s with ideas for New Bombay  and new metropolitan imaginations was all about evolutionary gestures.  But today in Mumbai we celebrate involutionary gestures - how we fix  sidewalks and upgrade slums. (...) I think the real question for us is what is the appropriate city for  our society, our economy, for the kind of inequality that exists. Looking  at Dubai or Shanghai or Singapore as metaphors not only undermines the  fact that we’re a democracy but it also undermines the fact that the  poor even exist in our cities'.

 


