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40 MILLION DOLLAR NEW SWAMINARAYAN MANDIR OPENS IN TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA ON JULY 22, 2007..... Posted by Vishva News Reporter on July 17, 2007 |

The Swaminarayan Mandir, a Hindu
temple at Highway 427 and Finch Ave, Toronto, Ontario, Canada., is due to open July 22, 2007.
More than 24,000 parts were hand-carved in India and then assembled
on site. This Mandir, amid a dismal landscape, is a marvel of architecture.
(Richard Lautens/Toronto Star). Please click
here (BAPS SWAMINARAYAN NEWS) for more photos
and information on the Mandir. |
40 MILLION DOLLAR
New Canadian
Swaminarayan Mandir
Set to Open on July 22, 2007
From
Hindusim Today:TORONTO, CANADA, July 7, 2007:
(HPI note: Hinduism Today
and HPI publisher Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami will be an honored
guest at this opening on July 22.) Welcome to the new Canada now taking
shape at Highway 427 and Finch Ave., it comes in the form of one of the
most extraordinary buildings ever seen in this country.
Though the name, Swaminarayan Mandir, won't mean much to most Canadians, no one could
help but notice this remarkable structure. T he local Hindu community
(there are 191,305 Hindus in Toronto, according to Statistics Canada),
which paid for the $40 million building without any public or foundation
funding and provided 400 volunteer workers, wants the world to know it
has arrived.
Walls and ceilings are embellished with carved figures, both human and
animal -- everything from dancing women to elephants and peacocks. The
fact that every element, big and small, is carved in stone, only makes
the effect that much more astonishing. Indeed, the temple is a monument
to skills largely lost in our mechanized age.
The materials--marble from
India and Italy, limestone from Turkey--were shipped first to a series
of villages in India where they were sculpted into their final form. The
pieces were then transported to Toronto to be assembled. Given that
there were more than 24,000 individual parts, this was no mean feat.
As project manager, engineer Naren Sachdev, one of
many who have donated their time and expertise to the building of the
temple, explains, each piece was marked with a bar code to facilitate
construction. This unique combination of ancient techniques and modern
technology allowed the complex to be finished in record time. |

Pujya Kothari Swami performs
Stambh Sthapan Vidhi (pujan of pillar) on June 11, 2006 at
New Canadian
Swaminarayan Mandir in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
As project manager, engineer Naren Sachdev, one of
many who have donated their time and expertise to the building of the
temple, explains, each piece was marked with a bar code to facilitate
construction. This unique combination of ancient techniques and modern
technology allowed the complex to be finished in record time.
The
project started in 2005 and opens officially in two weeks. Because work
stopped during winter, actual construction time was only 18 months.
Despite the use of computers and high-tech equipment, the building
itself could have been constructed several millennia ago. No steel was
used in the building at all, it's stone piled on stone. The columns, of
which there are 340, are solid rock. The building, Sachdev points out,
will last a thousand years.
Beneath the mandir, at ground level, is the Indo-Canadian Museum of
Cultural Heritage. This will be the specifically Canadian addition to
what is otherwise a traditional complex, a nod to multiculturalism.
"This is a place open to all," says community leader Suresh Thakrar.
"That's especially appropriate considering that it's a global project.
We also want people to be educated about Indo-Canadians."
"We believe
this is a living building, so it has to be built in a certain way," adds Nitya Vivek Swami, a Hindu monk who has lived in Toronto since the
project began.
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Please click on the next line to read the full story from
Toronto Star newspaper......
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Serenity that's set
in stone
Toronto Star:
Jul 07, 2007:
Christopher Hume
Urban Affairs Columnist
Welcome to the new Canada.
Now taking shape at Highway 427 and Finch Ave., it comes in the form of
one of the most extraordinary buildings ever seen in this country.
Though the name, Swaminarayan Mandir, won't mean much to most Canadians,
no one, not even those speeding by in cars and trucks, could help but
notice this remarkable structure.
It stands out, to say the least, especially in this dismal
suburban/industrial landscape at the north end of the city. Indeed,
one's first reaction is to the surreality of the whole thing – a
full-blown Hindu temple complex on the side of a highway to nowhere.
Of course, that was part of the plan; the local Hindu community (there
are 191,305 Hindus in Toronto, according to Statistics Canada), which
paid for the $40 million building without any public or foundation
funding and provided 400 volunteer workers, wants the world to know it
has arrived. By constructing such a building at such a site, there's no
chance its presence will go unnoticed. Nor should it be; a project such
as this happens once in a lifetime, in Canada, only once in many
lifetimes.
To those of us raised on an architectural diet of steel, glass and
brick, it will come a shock to discover that there are people in the
world who still know how to build with a hammer and chisel. And not just
build, but create structures of the most amazing beauty and complexity.
The Swaminarayan complex is a building that can be read almost like a
book; it relates a narrative and speaks to users and visitors much as
early cathedrals once spoke to Christians. The iconography here is not
about heaven and hell, however, reward and retribution, but about peace
and pleasure.
Walls and ceilings are embellished with carved figures, both human and
animal – everything from dancing women to elephants and peacocks. These
are images of welcome, sensual but also serene.
The fact that every element, big and small, is carved in stone, only
makes the effect that much more astonishing. Indeed, the temple is a
monument to skills largely lost in our mechanized age.
The materials – marble from India and Italy, limestone from Turkey –
were shipped first to a series of villages in India where they were
sculpted into their final form.
The pieces were then transported to Toronto to be assembled.
Given that there were more than 24,000 individual parts, this was no
mean feat.
As project manager, engineer Naren Sachdev, one of many who have donated
their time and expertise to the building of the temple, explains, each
piece was marked with a bar code to facilitate construction.
This unique combination of ancient techniques and modern technology,
which complement one another much more naturally than one might expect,
allowed the complex to be finished in record time.
The project started in 2005 and opens officially in two weeks. Because
work stopped during winter, actual construction time was only 18 months.
Despite the use of computers and high-tech equipment, the building
itself could have been constructed several millennia ago.
The walls, for example, are all load-bearing; there's no steel skeleton
here holding the whole thing up.
In fact, no steel was used at all, it's stone piled on stone. The
columns, of which there are 340, are solid rock (and rock solid).
|
Even the delicately curved interiors of the domes are sculpted from
marble and held in place with stone keys.
The building, Sachdev points out, will last a thousand years; but the
mechanical systems, all as contemporary as can be, will need replacing
within 25 years.
To enter the mandir, visitors climb a large stairwell that leads to an
entrance balcony. Exterior flows effortlessly into interior; both have
equal importance and are part of the same story.
Even the balustrades are made of carved stone.
What's interesting here is how decoration isn't applied to the building,
but how it becomes the building.
The intention is to create an environment that refers to the world
beyond, nature, but one that's set apart, a space of contemplation and
spiritual awareness.
The visitor is engaged at every level, it is a total experience.
Even as workers hammer, grind and saw, the building manages to
mesmerize.
In the midst of the chaos of construction, one can feel a sense of
serenity.
Here is an encapsulation of the universe itself, as well as a microcosm
of human existence.
Beneath the mandir, at ground level, is the Indo-Canadian Museum of
Cultural Heritage.
This will be the specifically Canadian addition to what is otherwise a
traditional complex, a nod to multiculturalism.
"This is a place open to all," says community leader Suresh Thakrar.
"That's especially appropriate considering that it's a global project.
We also want people to be educated about Indo-Canadians."
"We believe this is a living building, so it has to be built in a
certain way," adds Nitya Vivek Swami, a Hindu monk (and computer science
grad) who has lived in Toronto since the project began.
He has worked on similar buildings in Houston, Chicago and London.
Though members will have to raise even more money than they already
have, the land around the temple will eventually contain a large garden,
something that will help root the temple in its site, however strange it
may seem now.
"The cost has been kept down by a lot of in-kind labour offered by
volunteers," says volunteer Roy Patel. "We had to bring as many as 100
stone artisans and sompura (architects) from India to work on the
project. We would appreciate any government financing, but so far none
has been forthcoming."
That's something he might want to raise with Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Toronto Mayor David Miller
when they attend the opening ceremonies on July 22.
Inevitably, the complex will exert a powerful influence on its
surroundings, immediate and more far-flung.
Things won't change overnight, but don't forget, first we shape our
buildings, and then they shape us.
Christopher Hume is the Star's urban affairs columnist. He can be
reached at chume@thestar.ca. |
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