Draft:Narinder Lamba
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Submission declined on 2 April 2025 by Liance (talk). This submission is not adequately supported by reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be verified. If you need help with referencing, please see Referencing for beginners and Citing sources. This submission's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article—that is, they do not show significant coverage (not just passing mentions) about the subject in published, reliable, secondary sources that are independent of the subject (see the guidelines on the notability of people). Before any resubmission, additional references meeting these criteria should be added (see technical help and learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue). If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Wikipedia. Declined by Liance 48 days ago. | ![]() |
Comment: Per User:Liance Signed, Pichemist ( Contribs | Talk ) 06:45, 15 April 2025 (UTC)
Comment: Further sourcing is required to demonstrate notability. itpi.org.in is not independent of the subject. Much of the content is unsourced as well. ~Liancetalk 22:06, 2 April 2025 (UTC)
Narinder Singh Lamba | |
---|---|
Born | Miani, Sargodha District, British India (now in Pakistan) | 11 April 1922
Died | 9 May 1978 | (aged 56)
Nationality | Indian |
Occupation | Urban planner |
Known for | Planning of Chandigarh and Mohali; refugee resettlement townships; urban design in Punjab |
Narinder Singh Lamba (11 April 1922 – 9 May 1978) was an Indian town planner and urban designer, best known for his key role in the planning and development of the city of Chandigarh and for shaping post-Partition urban development in Punjab and Haryana.[1][2] He served as the Chief Town Planner of the government of Punjab and was President of the Institute of Town Planners, India (ITPI) from 1969 to 1970.[1][2]
Early life and education
[edit]Lamba was born on 11 April 1922 in Miani, in the Sargodha district of British India (present-day Pakistan).[2] He earned a civil engineering degree with honours from Punjab Engineering College, Lahore, in 1942.[2] In 1943, he joined the Punjab government as an Assistant Town Planner.[2] Following the Partition of India in 1947, Lamba was entrusted with planning new refugee resettlement towns in East Punjab (areas that later became part of Punjab and Haryana).[2] He received a Post-War Reconstruction Scholarship in 1948 to pursue town planning studies in the United Kingdom, and completed a postgraduate diploma in Town and Country Planning at Durham University in 1950.[2] He later obtained a United Nations fellowship in 1960 to study urban planning practices in Europe and the UK.[2]
Career
[edit]After finishing his studies in Britain, Lamba returned to India in 1950 and joined the Chandigarh Capital Project Team during the early construction of the new Punjab capital.[3][4] Working closely with Le Corbusier and his associates Pierre Jeanneret, Maxwell Fry, and Jane Drew, Lamba helped translate the master plan of Chandigarh into reality.[3] He was one of the senior Indian planners and engineers on the project, alongside P. N. Thapar and others, who supervised the day-to-day development of the city.[3][5] Lamba played a significant part in formulating Chandigarh’s urban design and development controls, such as its sector zoning and the protective greenbelt around the city’s periphery – measures that later served as models for other cities in India.[2] In 1959, at age 37, he was made a Fellow of the UK’s Royal Town Planning Institute, reportedly the youngest person to receive that honour at the time.[2][6]
In 1962, Lamba was appointed State Town Planner of Punjab in the Town and Country Planning Department.[2] He later became the first **Chief Town Planner** of Punjab on 4 August 1970, when that department was reorganized as a full-fledged directorate.[2] During this tenure, he guided the planning of various towns and expansion projects across the state. Notably, he established a **Mandi Towns Division** to develop agricultural market townships and a **Mohali Division** to plan the new urban estate of Mohali (SAS Nagar) as an integrated satellite city near Chandigarh.[2] Lamba also oversaw urban renewal schemes for older cities in Punjab – for example, improvements around the Golden Temple and Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar, and redevelopment projects in cities like Jalandhar, Ludhiana, and Pathankot.[2]
Lamba was active in professional circles as well. He served as the President of the Institute of Town Planners, India, during 1969–1970, during which time he chaired the Tenth Annual Town Planning Conference in Thiruvananthapuram with a focus on rural–urban integration in development planning.[2]
International work
[edit]Lamba’s expertise was recognized internationally. In 1970, he was invited as a co-director for a month-long seminar on urban planning in West Berlin, organized by the German Foundation for Developing Countries, where he collaborated with planners from about 15 nations.[2] In early 1971, the United Nations selected Lamba as an urban planning expert; he served as a U.N. Town Planning Advisor in the Kingdom of Lesotho (southern Africa) from 1971 to 1973, helping develop regional planning strategies there.[2] He also undertook study tours and exchanges: in 1970, under a Ford Foundation program, he visited countries like the United States, Brazil (examining the new capital Brasília), Colombia, the UK, France, and others to study new city projects.[2] Later, in 1977, Lamba received a research associateship from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) of Canada to examine the planning of new towns in various African countries (such as Kenya, Tanzania, Nigeria, and Malawi) and in the UK – research aimed at improving new town development in emerging economies.[2]
Teaching and publications
[edit]Alongside his government service, Lamba was involved in academia. He taught courses in town planning and urban design at the Punjab Engineering College and later at the Chandigarh College of Architecture from 1959 until 1970, influencing a generation of students in the region.[2] He also wrote on urban planning topics. He contributed articles to professional journals and gave interviews to the press about the planning of Chandigarh.[2] Lamba’s own publications included a booklet titled Trees and Towns (published by the Punjab government) and a study, Town Planning in Other Countries, published in 1973 by the Technical University of Berlin.[2] At the time of his death, he was working on a book manuscript about planning new towns with reference to Chandigarh, though it remained unfinished.[2]
Death and legacy
[edit]Narinder S. Lamba died on 9 May 1978 while still serving as Punjab’s Chief Town Planner.[2] He is remembered as an important figure in India’s post-independence urban development. In 1999, during Chandigarh’s 50th anniversary celebrations, he and other local planners were publicly honored as the “unsung” contributors to Chandigarh’s creation, finally receiving recognition for their work decades after the city’s completion.[1] Architecture experts at the conference noted that the contributions of Indian officials like Lamba were just as vital as those of the famed foreign architects in building Chandigarh’s legacy.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d The Tribune, "Unsung planners of Chandigarh get their due", 11 January 1999. Retrieved 2 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "The Leading Lights of ITPI: Their Mission and Profession over the Sixty Years" (PDF). Institute of Town Planners, India, 2010. Retrieved 2 April 2025.
- ^ a b c "Chandigarh (20-Year Perspective Tourism Master Plan)" (PDF). Ministry of Tourism, Government of India. Retrieved 2 April 2025.
- ^ Prakash, Vikramaditya (2002). Chandigarh's Le Corbusier: The Struggle for Modernity in Postcolonial India. University of Washington Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780295982076.
- ^ "UT planners, engineers honoured". The Tribune. 11 January 1999. Retrieved 2 April 2025.
M.N. Sharma... said the contribution of P. N. Thapar, N. S. Lamba, D. P. Mathur, Prabhavalkar and Giani Rattan Singh... was no less.
- ^ Kalia, Ravi (1987). Chandigarh: In Search of an Identity. Southern Illinois University Press. p. 54. ISBN 9780809313105.
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