Lahore Walled City Project to Benefit from a Public-Private
Partnership between Government of Punjab and the Aga
Khan Trust for Culture
Lahore, Pakistan, 02 July 2007 – The
Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC) joined the Government
of the Punjab and the World Bank today in support
of a project for the regeneration, renewal, and conservation
of Lahore’s Walled City.
“This
remarkable project should be seen as a catalyst for
overall development. In our experience, projects like
this one have had a positive impact well beyond conservation,
both in other parts of Pakistan, where we have been
working since the 1980s, and in environments as varied
as Afghanistan, Mali and Egypt,” said Luis Monreal,
General Manager of the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.
“We do not intend to pursue a mode of rehabilitation
that focuses only on the buildings, but rather we
want to help renew a city with the full engagement
of the inhabitants and through a process in which
improving the quality of life is a central part of
the revitalisation process, “he added.
Speaking
in Lahore at the ceremony marking the start of AKTC’s
involvement in the project Mr. Monreal said the agency
hoped the project would become a model for the urban
regeneration of historic cities in the Punjab.
The
programme has been launched by the Government of the
Punjab with the assistance of the World Bank. In June
2006, the World Bank released funding for the current
Punjab Municipal Services Improvement Project being
undertaken by the Government of Punjab, including
a significant Cultural Heritage Component. This programme
represents an unusual opportunity to apply the best
practices of urban regeneration and conservation planning
in the context of historic cities in Punjab, starting
with the Lahore Walled City project as a base case.
The Aga Khan Trust for Culture will be joining this
initiative as a strategic partner.
The
Aga Khan Trust for Culture, the cultural agency of
the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), has been
involved in numerous restoration projects in Pakistan
since the early 1980s. Among many other efforts, it
restored the Baltit Fort in Karimabad, the Northern
Areas of Pakistan. In 1999, the Trust extended its
activities to Baltistan by undertaking conservation
and physical/ socioeconomic development initiatives
in the Skardu district, in Shigar and Khaplu, where
monuments with tourism potential have been restored
for adaptive re-use as part of a package of local
economic regeneration. The Trust’s Historic
Cities Programme has undertaken projects which provide
for area-wide urban and economic regeneration in historic
cities through “area development projects”
and has been able to demonstrate the significant development
potential of the cultural assets of historic districts
when linked to integrated economic, social, and environmental
redevelopment initiatives.
The
Programme undertakes projects involving urban regeneration,
conservation, and physical and social re-vitalization
of communities in historic cities and settlements
in developing countries. It operates in tandem, where
appropriate, with other AKDN agencies such as the
Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and the Aga Khan Agency
for Microfinance (AKAM) in an integrated manner to
bring the required expertise to multi-sector, urban
area development projects.
The
Trust also held its first Award for Architecture Ceremony
in the Shalimar Gardens, in Lahore, in 1980, in recognition
of the historic status of the city and its numerous
landmark sites.
For more information, please contact:
Abedeen
Hussain
Press and Media Coordinator
+92 (0) 345 222 7733
communication@akcpk.org
Fax: +92 21 222 7210
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