Development today has become synonymous with increased consumption. But as the world attempts to grapple with the ongoing climate crisis, factors like sustainability and resource efficiency seem to be increasingly staking a claim at the decision-making table across sectors. So how do we, as architects and designers in contemporary India, devise solutions that fit into this need for resource efficiency while allowing for experimentation and innovation?
For centuries, local architecture has been effectively responding to its bio-climatic conditions, organically developing solutions to the same problems we are facing today—the creation of spaces that shelter us from the climate and the optimal use of resources in construction. Solutions derived from centuries-old wisdom illustrate that simple solutions are often the most effective. Limited building footprints, orientation based on sun path, and optimised shading and window-to-wall ratios are age-old techniques that are low on investment and high on returns. These methods are as relevant today as they were in the past and chart out on a starting point for innovation in the current context.