Residents recall legacy of Junta House, once Goa’s tallest building that is now ‘unsafe’ | India News

“It was the tallest building in Goa when it came up and perhaps only the second building with a lift,” recounts historian Prajal Sakhardande. “We used to go there just to see the lift.”

‘Junta House’ — Goa’s tallest building when it was built six decades ago – and one of its earliest skyscrapers, has been declared ‘unsafe’ and is set to be vacated.

In an order, Ankit Yadav, collector and chairperson of the district disaster management authority of North Goa, said last week that based on a recent audit report, the building is “structurally vulnerable” and poses a “safety hazard” due to considerable deterioration and retrofitting is not economically feasible. The collector has ordered a complete eviction of the entire Junta House building within a month. The order marks an end of an era for the city. The building, which has a mural of an elderly woman — ‘Aunty Rosy’ in a red dress holding a grocery bag in one hand and a coconut in the other — on its façade, evokes memories from when it was first constructed.

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For more than two decades, Dr Mahendra Tamba lived and worked in a building opposite the Junta House. “Till 1984, Madan Lal Sadan and Junta House were the only skyscrapers in Panaji. The Regional Transport Office (RTO) used to be on the first floor. I remember they used to take the test for learner’s licence on the road between Akbar Ali Building and Junta House.”

“It is a landmark building and has heritage value. It must be preserved,” said Sakhardande.

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Located in the capital Panaji along the junction of 18th June Road and Swami Vivekanand Road, the six-storey building was constructed sometime in early 1960s around the time Goa was liberated from Portuguese rule. The government building was inaugurated by the then L-G of Goa, Daman and Diu KR Damle on August 15, 1966 during the tenure of Goa’s first chief minister Dayanand Bandodkar. The iconic edifice symbolized a transformative and modern vision of Goa post liberation.

Historian Dr Maria de Lourdes Bravo da Costa said that the land where the building came up belonged to the ‘Junta Do Comercio Externo’ (Board of External Trade), an autonomous department of the government during the Portuguese times which used to grant import licenses. “They had their godown there, which still exists beside the building. So, when it was constructed, the building took the same Portuguese name ‘Junta’.”

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Residents recall legacy of Junta House, once Goa’s tallest building that is now ‘unsafe’ The building was opened in 1966 in Panaji. (Express Photo)

A government official, requesting anonymity, said, “There was a tussle too with some wanting the building to be named ‘Janata’ House, which means ‘building of the people’.”

Among the government departments that operated from the building include the Department of Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs, Directorate of Official Language, Directorate of Planning, Statistics and Evaluation, Office of Commissioner Labour and Employment, Office of Civil Registrar-cum-Sub-Registrars, Goa Forest Development Corporate Limited and Goa State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission.

With the Directorate of Transport and Labour and Employment Department offices operating from the building, its central location within the city lent itself to be the site of several strikes and agitations. Trade union leaders would often camp near the building’s staircase and sit on a hunger strike.

In December 1978, student unions, who were demanding a 50 percent concession in bus fare, gheraoed the Regional Transport Office (RTO) in the Junta House building, in what came to be known as the “half ticket” agitation, said Sakhardande. “The agitation, in a way, began from the building.”

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The sixth floor of the premises, which housed the Swami Vivekanand Society, was the most famous. The state-of-the-art Swami Vivekanand Hall was the epicentre of all cultural events — theatre, Marathi and Konkani dramas, classical music, dance classes and lectures.

“Kala Academy had not come up at the time… it was the only hall where people could go to see theatre, music and dance performances,” Dr Tamba said.

Prakash Kamat, a member of the State Advisory Board on Disability, said, “My wedding reception took place on January 26, 1993 at Swami Vivekanand Hall in Junta House.” “Many government offices in the building involved a public interface. People would go there to get registration certificates of births, deaths and marriages or pay a traffic challan.”

A public astronomical observatory, operating from the building’s terrace, was set up by the Association of Friends of Astronomy (AFA) in 1990 and is supported and funded by the Goa government. Satish Nayak, President Public Astronomical Observatory and AFA said the association was founded by renowned historian and bureaucrat Percival Noronha in 1982.

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Architect Analia da Costa, who wrote a dissertation titled ‘Expressing Identity Through Architecture in Post 1961 Goa’ said the design of the Junta House is ‘modernist’. “The façade had horizontal and vertical bands, horizontal balconies and a concrete structure. It had a flat roof and was on a much bigger scale, which was uncommon for Goan structures at the time. The elements in the building seemed heavily influenced and similar to the architecture of other buildings being constructed by the Central Public Works Department at the time, which was modernist and of a forward-looking India.”

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