Christopher Charles Benninger

Christopher Charles Benninger (born November 23, 1942) is an American architect.

Christopher Charles Benninger
Born (1942-11-23) November 23, 1942
Alma materHarvard GSD
MIT
OccupationArchitect
AwardsGreat Master Architect of India
PracticeCCBA Designs
BuildingsMahindra United World College, Suzlon One Earth, India House
ProjectsSupreme Court of Bhutan; College of Engineering Pune; Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad
Websiteccba.in

Benninger emigrated to India in 1971. He studied architecture at the University of Florida, doing his post-graduate education in urban planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and post-graduation in architecture at Harvard University, where he later taught. His design thesis at Harvard (1967) explored his original idea of Site and Services Shelter Systems, which he transformed into an on the ground project for the World Bank and the Madras Urban Development Authority in 1973.[1] Travels to South America in his youth, observing struggling communities and indigenous cultures, had an ever-lasting impact on his life's work. All of his post graduate studies focused on more inclusive, accessible, sustainable urban and regional systems, leading him to a Fulbright Fellowship to India (1968–1969) where he studied shelter systems, leading to his highly quoted article in the Ekistics Journal, "Models of Habitat Mobility in Transitional Economies".[2]

Leaving aside his professor's post at Harvard in 1971 he returned to Ahmedabad as a Ford Foundation Advisor to the Centre for Environmental Planning and Technology, invited by B.V. Doshi, to jointly found the Faculty of Planning, at CEPT University, where Benninger presently sits on the Board of Management[3]

Benninger's curriculum at CEPT integrated socio-economic and spatial systems planning, with the intention of creating professionals with a sound understanding of India's development challenges and the role of systems planning to improve the lives of common people.

In this vein he founded the Center for Development Studies and Activities (1976) with Aneeta Gokhale Benninger.

Benninger has advised multiple international organizations within the United Nations system, including the World Bank and Asian Development Bank, regarding just and equitable investment and development policies, programs, and projects. He has advised the governments of Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Nepal, Malaysia, Indonesia, and states across India on the preparation of their regional and urban development plans, emphasizing "user end access," to health, safety, security, skill development and employment, with minimal acceptable comfort levels.

He has written in the field of architecture and urbanism; his book Letters to a Young Architect appeared on the Top Ten Best Selling Books of India list.[4]

Benninger's architectural studios, CCBA Designs Pvt. Ltd., at India House, in Pune, India was founded with his partner Ramprasad Akkisetti Naidu. The firm specialises in appropriate sustainable design, with projects in India, Bhutan, China and Burundi. The book Christopher Benninger: Architecture for Modern India, published by SKIRA, in Milan, Italy, jointly with Rizzoli in America illustrates the firm's architectural and urban planning work.

Early life and education

Dr. Lawrence Joseph Benninger (Christopher's father), hailed from a working-class Czechoslovakian immigrant family. He was a professor of economics, specializing in accounting systems, publishing articles and books, and was popular on the lecture circuit in his field. He advised the governments in Central and South America on economic development, helping to found a college for young professional managers in Medellin, Colombia.

Benninger's architectural philosophy was influenced by early visits to his parents' home in Medellin, Colombia, where he witnessed the effects of poverty, exploitation of immigrant populations, and the imposition of western cultural norms over ancient indigenous civilizations.

Benninger's mother, Ernestine Minerva Eberlein, hailed from a French aristocratic family focused on a western urbane lifestyle of music, art, drama and architecture. His mother's sister Roxane Eberlein was in a relationship with Adlai Stevenson II, giving Benninger the opportunity to attend United Nations Security Council Meetings as an observer. Stevenson's close circle of associates brought Benninger close to personalities like Sir Robert Jackson, Chairman of the United Nations Relief Organization, and an advisor to India and Bangladesh. Jackson gifted Benninger a lifetime subscription of the development journal Ekistics, introducing him to an international association of people committed to an ethical world community, with a common code of development. Barbara Ward, author of India and the West, Five Ideas that Changed the World and Only One Earth, became Benninger's lifelong mentor, inviting him to the Delos Symposium in Greece (1967). He traveled to Athens from Paris by bycicle, during which he experienced less developed areas of the European countryside, including cycling through Communist Yugoslavia, giving him a balanced view of life under Communism. The Delos Symposium included world thought leaders like Buckminster Fuller, Arnold J. Toynbee, Barbara Ward, Jaqueline Tyrwhitt, and Constantinos Apostolou Doxiadis who presented their theories and practice of development, reviewing Barbara Ward’s plan for the first Habitat Forum at Vancouver, Doxiadis’ plan for Islamabad and Jaqueline Tyrwhitt’s strategies for sheltering the poor in India as a UN human settlements advisor, setting up India’s department of housing. [5]

These influences had a powerful impact on Benninger's life. At the University of Florida, he was a student founder of Freedom Party, standing for integrating the university, stopping racial segregation, opening more admissions for women, ending compulsory military training on campus, and other social goals. Under Martin Luther King's leadership, he and his sister, Judith Benninger Brown, actively supported the Congress for Racial Equality, entering segregated cinema halls and restaurants with their coloured friends forcing the owners to allow access of coloured into their establishments.

Leaving Florida for Cambridge, Massachusetts, Benninger entered Harvard's Graduate School of Design as one of 12 students studying under Josep Lluis Sert, Joseph Zaleski, and Jerzy Soltan, all Le Corbusier collaborators. There he studied art under Mirko Basaldella, the Italian sculptor. He studied development economics under John Kenneth Galbraith, past Ambassador to India and author of The New Industrial State. He continued his post graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, under Horacio Caminos, working on the book Urban Dwelling Environments.

Personal Life

Benninger is married to Aneeta Gokhale Benninger, an environmentalist, and has one son Lawrence Siddhartha Benninger, a development planner who has developed new digital planning analysis and management tools.[6]

Career

Benninger studied under Josep Lluis Sert and worked in his studio. On the invitation of B. V. Doshi, in 1971 he resigned from his tenured post at Harvard and shifted to Ahmedabad, India as a Ford Foundation Advisor to the Ahmedabad Educational Society, where he founded the School of Planning.[7] In 1976 he shifted to Pune, India, where he founded the Center for Development Studies and Activities.[8] In 1983 Benninger wrote the Theme Paper for the United Nations Commission on Human Settlements 1984. In 1986 he was engaged by the Asian Development Bank to author their position paper on Urban Development, arguing successfully the case for extending financial assistance to the urban development sector. Benninger is on the Board of Editors of CITIES journal (UK).[9]

Architectural works

Benninger's designs include the Center for Development Studies and Activities, the Mahindra United World College of India, the Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies, the YMCA International Camp, Nilshi, India, the Kirloskar Institute of Advanced Management Studies, Azim Premji University, Bengaluru and the International School Aamby. The Centre for Life Sciences Health and Medicine in Pune is a radical departure from his earlier work.[10]

The Mahindra United World College of India won international recognition as the recipient of the Business Week/Architectural Record Award for Excellence in 2000. This award was sponsored jointly with the American Institute of Architects. Business Week called the Mahindra United World College of India one of the ten super structures of the world in 2000.[11] The project also won the Designer of the Year Award [12] in 1999.

Benninger's work in urban design, city management and town planning resulted in his principles of intelligent urbanism, which guided his planning of the new capital of Bhutan.[13]

Awards and recognition

Benninger is the sixth winner in India of the Golden Architect Award for Lifetime Achievement (2006), conferred in May 2007 by the A+D and Spectrum Foundation.[14] Six Indian architects had previously been honored with the Great Master's Award.[15] Over several years he was recognized as one of the top ten architects in India by Construction World Magazine.[16] He was conferred with the Singapore Lifetime Achievement Award by the Singapore-based Business Excellence & Research Group (BERG) in 2015.[17]

Awards

  • 2000 | Top 10 Best Buildings of the World | The Business Week Architectural Record Awards of American Institute of Architects, USA for Mahindra United World College of India.[18]
  • 2001 | The Aga Khan Award for Architecture for Mahindra United World College of India as the top 20 best projects of the world.[19]
  • 2002 | The World Architecture Awards, Berlin for Mahindra United World College of India as a finalist. [20]
  • 2006 | Recognition for Excellence in Design, U.K. - Lifetime achievement award. [21]
  • 2006 | Golden Architect Award for Lifetime Achievement by A+D and Spectrum Foundation [22]
  • 2010 | World Architecture Community, U.K. - Citation for Nabha House, Haryana Cultural Centre, New Delhi, India. [23]
  • 2011 | Holcim Sustainability Awards, Switzerland for Lifecare Multi-specialty Hospital, Udgir - Certificate of Appreciation. [24]

Publications

  • Letters to a Young Architect | 2009 [25]

Letters to a Young Architects is a sensitive memoir of Christopher Benninger's life in India and his personal concerns about Architectural Theory and contemporary urban issues.[26]

  • Architecture for Modern India | 2015 [27]

This is a book about the practice of Architecture in South Asia and the kinds of artifacts CCBA Designs has produced over the past many years.[28]

See also

References

  1. "Ar. C.C. Benninger". ARCHITECTURE ICONS OF INDIA.
  2. "Models of Habitat Mobility in Transitional Economies". WorldCat.
  3. "People". CEPT.
  4. "Letters to a Young Architect". goodreads.
  5. "CHRISTOPHER BENNINGER: CYRUS JHABVALA MEMORIAL LECTURE 2018". THINKMATTER. 28 March 2019.
  6. "People". CDSA.
  7. Lang, Jon T., A concise history of modern architecture in India, 2002, Page 45
  8. Archpresspk.com Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Elsevier.com
  10. G-therapy.org Archived 2010-05-12 at the Wayback Machine
  11. Businessweek.com
  12. "Archlib.njit.edu". Archived from the original on 2010-08-05. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  13. Dudh.gov.bt Archived 2010-06-23 at the Wayback Machine
  14. "AESA HONOUR FOR BENNINGER". Times of India. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  15. "Expressindia.com". Archived from the original on 2012-10-05. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
  16. Constructionupdate.com Archived 2012-07-22 at archive.today
  17. "'India should consider making 100 existing cities smart'". BLoC. 25 July 2015. Retrieved 2021-11-15.
  18. "Christopher C. Benninger Intl. Assoc. AIA - Profile | AIA KnowledgeNet". network.aia.org. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  19. "Contact". UWC Mahindra College | Discover your Purpose. 2020-03-03. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  20. "Architect Christopher Charles Benninger". www.surfacesreporter.com. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  21. "legends of india lifetime achievement award News and Updates from The Economic Times - Page 8". The Economic Times. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  22. Shaikh, Asseem (March 22, 2014). "Indian architects are receptive to new ideas, Benninger says". The Times of India. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  23. "Nabha House, New Delhi". worldarchitecture.org. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  24. "Journal of Indian Institute of Architects" (PDF). Journal of Indian Institute of Architects. 84 (7). July 2019. ISSN 0019-4913.
  25. "Letters To A Young Architect". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  26. "Letters to a young architect". Architectural Review. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  27. "Book: Christopher Benninger: Architecture for Modern India". Matter. 2016-11-17. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  28. "Christopher Benninger: Architecture for Modern India (Hardcover) | The Book Stall". www.thebookstall.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
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