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A winter date with Chandigarh’s soul

Inside, the fog and filtered light perform a quiet miracle; high ceilings promise cool summers, wide windows open into green vistas, and delicately patterned jaalis scatter a soft glow across the rooms

Published on: Jan 18, 2026 06:38 AM IST
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January wrapped Chandigarh in its familiar winter shawl — fog-softened mornings, school vacations, and long reflective walks. And in that quiet chill, I found myself on a gentle, unhurried date with my beloved city — at the humble yet dignified Pierre Jeanneret Museum in Sector 5, once the residence of the man who helped give Chandigarh its character.

The porches — elegant yet unassuming — speak volumes of an architectural mind rooted in simplicity. (Sourced)
The porches — elegant yet unassuming — speak volumes of an architectural mind rooted in simplicity. (Sourced)

Plain at first glance, the red-brick house sits surrounded by towering Buddha coconut trees, its calm presence echoing stories of the Swiss-French architect Pierre Jeanneret — cousin, collaborator, and creative soulmate of Le Corbusier, who shaped Jawaharlal Nehru’s dream of a modern city.

Inside, the fog and filtered light perform a quiet miracle. High ceilings promise cool summers, wide windows open into green vistas, and delicately patterned jaalis scatter a soft glow across the rooms. The porches — elegant yet unassuming — speak volumes of an architectural mind rooted in simplicity.

This was the first private house Jeanneret built in Chandigarh, a lived-in manifesto of his design philosophy — functional, humane, democratic. His work ranged from government schools to the Panjab University campus, the iconic Gandhi Bhawan, libraries, civic buildings — timeless spaces that continue to inspire modern architectural practice even today.

He also designed paddle boats for Sukhna Lake — his retreat in life, and finally, his place of rest, where his ashes were scattered. The museum today stands not merely as a memorial, but as a learning space — an intimate archive of a thinker, maker, and city-lover.

A spiral staircase leads to the upper floor — three simple rooms now serving as guest spaces. Their modest bathrooms and sunlit balconies echo Plato’s timeless thought: “Beauty of style and harmony and grace and good rhythm depend on simplicity.”

One room holds a small, eye-shaped window — a sculptural marvel once opening toward Sukhna Lake. Though new constructions now obscure the view, I could still sense the lake beyond — its silence, its winter chill — and the words displayed at the Sukhna Gallery seemed to float back to me: “To see the stars in the sky and the stars in the mountains too, in the water — and all in absolute silence.”

Walking through this heritage home felt deeply personal — a quiet awareness that I was moving through the same spaces Jeanneret once walked, dreamed, worked, and loved. His understanding of people, culture, climate and comfort is stitched into every corner of this two-storeyed Maison Pierre Jeanneret — House No. 57, Sector 5 — a living lesson in sustainability, restraint and grace.

A city dreamed by Nehru. Planned by Le Corbusier. Given warmth and character by Pierre Jeanneret. Chandigarh is not just a city of brick and concrete — it is a city of dreams, of ideas made visible. Thank you, Pierre Jeanneret, for this quiet winter rendezvous — with the hidden gem in the crown of our City Beautiful.

(The writer is an assistant professor at the Department of Botany, DAV College, Sector 10, Chandigarh)

 
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