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Geoffrey Bawa
Born 1919
Died 2003
Gender Male
Country of Origin Sri Lanka
ArchNet Party ID AN00076
Description/Biography
Geoffrey Bawa is Sri Lanka's most prolific and influential architect. His work has had tremendous impact upon architecture throughout Asia and is unanimously acclaimed by connoisseurs of architecture worldwide. Highly personal in his approach, evoking the pleasures of the senses that go hand in hand with the climate, landscape, and culture of ancient Ceylon, Bawa brings together an appreciation of the Western humanist tradition in architecture with needs and lifestyles of his own country. Although Bawa came to practice at the age of 38, his buildings over the last 25 or more years are widely acclaimed in Sri Lanka. The intense devotion he brings to composing his architecture in an intimate relationship with nature is witnessed by his attention to landscape and vegetation, the crucial setting for his architecture. His sensitivity to environment is reflected in his careful attention to the sequencing of space, the creation of vistas, courtyards, and walkways, the use of materials and treatment of details.

Bawa was born in 1919 in what was then the British colony of Ceylon. His father was a wealthy and successful lawyer, of Muslim and English parentage, while his mother was of mixed German, Scottish and Sinhalese descent. In 1938 he went to Cambridge to read English, before studying law in London, where he was called to the Bar in 1944. After World War II he joined a Colombo law firm, but he soon tired of the legal profession and in 1946 set off on two years of travel that took him through the Far East, across the United States and finally to Europe.

In Italy he toyed with the idea of settling down permanently and resolved to buy a villa overlooking Lake Garda. He was now twenty-eight and had spent one-third of his life away from Ceylon. Not only had he become more and more European in outlook, but his ties to Ceylon were also weakening: both his parents were dead and he had disposed of the last of his Colombo property. The plan to buy an Italian villa came to nothing, however, and in 1948 he returned to Ceylon where he bought an abandoned rubber estate at Lunuganga, on the south-west coast between Colombo and Galle. His dream was to create an Italian garden from a tropical wilderness, but he soon found that his ideas were compromised by lack of technical knowledge. In 1951 he was apprenticed to H H Reid, the sole surviving partner of the Colombo architectural practice Edwards, Reid and Begg. When Reid died suddenly a year later Bawa returned to England and, after spending a year at Cambridge, enrolled as a student at the Architectural Association in London, where he is remembered as the tallest, oldest and most outspoken student of his generation.

Bawa finally qualified as an architect in 1957 at the age of thirty-eight and returned to Ceylon to take over what was left of Reid's practice. He gathered together a group of talented young designers and artists who shared his growing interest in Ceylon's forgotten architectural heritage, and his ambition to develop new ways of making and building. As well as his immediate office colleagues this group included the batik artist Ena de Silva, the designer Barbara Sansoni and the artist Laki Senanayake, all of whose work figures prominently in his buildings.

He was joined in 1959 by Ulrik Plesner, a young Danish architect who brought with him an appreciation of Scandinavian design and detailing, a sense of professionalism and a curiosity about Sri Lanka's building traditions. The two formed a close friendship and a symbiotic working relationship that lasted until Plesner quit the practice in 1967 to return to Europe and Bawa was joined by the engineer K Poologasundram, who remained his partner for the next twenty years. The practice established itself as the most respected and prolific in Sri Lanka, with a portfolio that included religious, social, cultural, educational, governmental, commercial and residential buildings, creating a canon of prototypes in each of these areas. It also became the springboard for a new generation of young Sri Lankan architects.

One of Bawa's earliest domestic buildings, a courtyard house built in Colombo for Ena De Silva in 1961, was the first to fuse elements of traditional Sinhalese domestic architecture with modern concepts of open planning, demonstrating that an outdoor life is viable on a tight urban plot. The Bentota Beach Hotel of 1968 was Sri Lanka's first purpose-built resort hotel, combining the conveniences required by demanding tourists with a sense of place and continuity that has rarely been matched. During the early 1970s a series of buildings for government departments developed ideas for the workplace in a tropical city, culminating in the State Mortgage Bank in Colombo, hailed at the time as one of the world's first bio-climatic high-rises.

Bawa's growing prestige was recognized in 1979, when he was invited by President Jayawardene to design Sri Lanka's new Parliament at Kotte, 8 kilometres east of Colombo. At Bawa's suggestion the swampy site was dredged to create an island at the centre of a vast artificial lake, with the Parliament building appearing as an asymmetric composition of copper roofs floating above a series of terraces rising out of the water. Abstract references to traditional Sri Lankan and South Indian architecture were incorporated within a Modernist framework to create a powerful image of democracy, cultural harmony, continuity and progress and a sense of gentle monumentality.

During the 1980s Bawa also designed the new Ruhunu University near Matara, a project that enabled him to demonstrate his mastery of external space and the integration of buildings in a landscape. The result is a matrix of pavilions and courtyards, arranged with careful casualness and a strong sense of theatre across a pair of rocky hills overlooking the southern ocean.

These projects brought Bawa international recognition and his work was celebrated in a Mimar monograph by Brian Brace Taylor and in a London exhibition. A later book by Christoph Bon on Lunuganga served both as a personal tribute to a friend and a beautiful photographic evocation of a garden. But the Parliament building and Ruhunu had left Bawa exhausted and at the end of the 1980s he withdrew from his partnership with Poologasundram and relinquished the name Edwards, Reid and Begg. He was now seventy and it was widely assumed that he would retire to Lunuganga and contemplate his garden. However, the break signalled a fresh round of creative activity and he began to work from his home in Bagatelle Road, Colombo, with a small group of young architects. Together they embarked on a stream of ambitious designs - hotels on Bali and Bintan, houses in Delhi and Ahmedabad, and a Cloud Centre for Singapore. None of these was built but each was treated as a test bed for new ideas.

Some of these ideas came to fruition in three hotels built in Sri Lanka in the 1990s: the Kandalama, conceived as an austere jungle palace, snaking around a rocky outcrop on the edge of an ancient tank in the Dry Zone; the Lighthouse at Galle, defying the southern oceans from its boulder-strewn headland; and the Blue Water, a cool pleasure pavilion set within a sedate coconut grove on the edge of Colombo. All three demonstrate Bawa's concern to `consult the genius of the place in all', as well as his skill at integrating architecture and landscape, and his scenographic manipulation of space.

One final house, designed for the Jayawardene family in 1997 as a weekend retreat on the cliffs of Mirissa, demonstrates Bawa's unflagging inventiveness. A phalanx of slender columns supports a wafer-thin roof to create a minimalist pavilion facing the southern ocean and the setting sun. Nearly forty years separate the Jayawardene House from the Ena de Silva House, but they are two points on a continuum, one a distillation of the other.

In 1998 Bawa was tragically struck down by a massive stroke that left him paralysed and unable to speak. A small group of colleagues, led by Channa Daswatte, have continued to work on the projects he initiated before his illness - an official residence for the President, a house in Bombay, a hotel in Panadura - with drawings being taken down the corridor from the office to Bawa's bedroom for nods of approval or rejection.

Looking back over his career, two projects hold the key to an understanding of Bawa's work: the garden at Lunuganga that he has continued to fashion for almost fifty years, and his own house in Colombo's Bagatelle Road. Lunuganga is a distant retreat, an outpost on the edge of the known world, a civilized garden within the larger wilderness of Sri Lanka, transforming an ancient rubber estate into a series of outdoor rooms that evoke memories of Sacro Bosco and Stourhead. The town house, in contrast, is an introspective assemblage of courtyards, verandas and loggias, created by knocking together four tiny bungalows and adding a white entry tower that peers like a periscope across neighbouring rooftops towards the distant ocean. It is a haven of peace, an infinite garden of the mind, locked away within a busy and increasingly hostile city.

Throughout its long and colourful history Sri Lanka has been subjected to strong outside influences from its Indian neighbours, from Arab traders and from European colonists, and it has always succeeded in translating these elements into something new but intrinsically Sri Lankan. Bawa has continued this tradition. His architecture is a subtle blend of modernity and tradition, East and West, formal and picturesque; he has broken down the artificial segregation of inside and outside, building and landscape; he has drawn on tradition to create an architecture that is fitting to its place, and he has also used his vast knowledge of the modern world to create an architecture that is of its time.

Since Bawa started out on his career, Sri Lanka's population has almost tripled, while its communities have been fractured by bitter political and ethnic disputes. Although it might be thought that his buildings have had no direct impact on the lives of ordinary people, Bawa has exerted a defining influence on the emerging architecture of independent Sri Lanka and on successive generations of younger architects. His ideas have spread across the island, providing a bridge between the past and the future, a mirror in which ordinary people can obtain a clearer image of their own evolving culture.

Source:
Khan, Hassan-Uddin. 1995. In Contemporary Asian Architects. Köln: Taschen Books.
Robson, David. 2001. The Aga Khan Award for Architecture Chairman's Award.

Associated sites
Site Location Country Images
33rd Lane Colombo Sri Lanka 11
A.S.H. De Silva House Galle Sri Lanka 9
Agrarian Research and Training Institute Colombo Sri Lanka 4
Banyan Tree Hotel Tanjung Pinang Indonesia 1
Bashir Currimjee House Port Louis Mauritius 1
Batujimbar Pavilions Sanur Indonesia 7
Bentota Beach Hotel Bentota Sri Lanka 13
Bishop's College Colombo Sri Lanka 4
Blue Water Hotel Colombo Sri Lanka 27
Candoline Hotel Goa India 0
Carmen Gunasekera House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Ceylon Pavilion 1970 World Fair Osaka Japan 0
Chapel for the Good Sheperd Convent Bandarawela Sri Lanka 5
Club House Ratnapura Sri Lanka 0
Club Mediterranee Nilaveli Sri Lanka 1
Club Villa Hotel Bentota Sri Lanka 6
Coral Gardens Hotel additions and renovations Hikkaduwa Sri Lanka 0
De Soysa House Colombo Sri Lanka 11
Deraniyagala House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Ekala Industrial Estate Jaela Sri Lanka 0
Fitzherbert House Tangalle Sri Lanka 11
Galadari Hotel Islamabad Pakistan 0
Hilton Hotel Colombo Sri Lanka 1
Hotel at Pondicherry Pondicherry India 1
Hotel Connamara Remodelling Chennai India 0
House for Chris and Carmel Raffel Colombo Sri Lanka 5
House for Dr. Bartholomeusz Colombo Sri Lanka 5
House for Lidia Gunasekera Bentota Sri Lanka 10
Hyatt Hotel Sanur Indonesia 1
Institute for Integral Education Piliyandala Sri Lanka 0
Jacobsen House Tangalle Sri Lanka 0
Jayakody House Bentota Sri Lanka 0
Jayakody House Colombo Sri Lanka 24
Jayawardena house Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Kanangara House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Kandalama Hotel Dambulla Sri Lanka 34
Kani Lanka Resort & Spa Kalutara Sri Lanka 0
Larry Gordon House Wakaya Fiji 1
Lighthouse Hotel Galle Sri Lanka 12
Lunuganga Bentota Sri Lanka 127
Madurai Boys' Town Madurai India 0
Madurai Club Madurai India 7
Mahahalpe Farm Kandy Sri Lanka 0
Manager's Bungalow Maskeliya Sri Lanka 1
Martenstyn House Colombo Sri Lanka 7
Meena Muttiah Hospital for the Kumarni of Chettinad Chennai India 0
Modi House Delhi India 1
Neptune Hotel Beruwala Sri Lanka 0
New Parliament Kotte Sri Lanka 18
Offices for Banque Indosuez Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Official Residence of the President Kotte Sri Lanka 0
Osmund and Ena de Silva House Colombo Sri Lanka 45
P.C. de Saram Terrace Houses Colombo Sri Lanka 4
Pallakele Industrial Estate Pallekele Sri Lanka 0
Panama Hotel Panama Sri Lanka 0
Peter White House Pereybere Mauritius 0
Pieter Keuneman House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Pim and Pam Fernando House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Poddar House Bangalore India 2
Polontalawa Estate Bungalow Polontalawa Sri Lanka 8
Pradeep Jayewardene House Mirissa Sri Lanka 23
Ruhunu University Matara Sri Lanka 30
Samy House Dahshur Egypt 4
Sarabhai House Ahmedabad India 1
Science Block Nugegoda Sri Lanka 0
Seema Malaka Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Serendib Hotel Bentota Sri Lanka 5
Singapore Cloud Centre Singapore Singapore 2
Spencer House Colombo Sri Lanka 8
St. Bridget's Montessori School Colombo Sri Lanka 7
St. Thomas' Preparatory School Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Stanley de Saram House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
State Mortgage Bank Colombo Sri Lanka 7
Steel Corporation Offices Oruwela Sri Lanka 0
Sunetra Bandaranaike House Horagolla Sri Lanka 0
Triton Hotel Ahungalla Sri Lanka 5
U.N. Headquarters Malé Maldives 0
Wijewardene House Colombo Sri Lanka 1
Wimal Fernando House Colombo Sri Lanka 0
Yahapath Endera Farm School Hanwella Sri Lanka 13
Yala Beach Hotel Yala Sri Lanka 2

Associated publications
Author Title Year
Robson, David Genius of the Place: The Buildings and Landscapes of Geoffrey Bawa 2001
Robson, David G Geoffrey Bawa Bibliography 2003
Jayawardene, Shanti Geoffrey Bawa of Sri Lanka 1986
Individual Houses: Indian Sub-Continent Individual Houses: Indian Sub-Continent 1987

Associated files
Author Title Type Year
Aga Khan Award for Architecture Graphic Panel of Award Winning Projects from the Eighth Cycle of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture (2001) graphic panels 2007

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