The Statue of Unity: Sardar Vallabbhai Patel
The Statue of Unity: Sardar Vallabbhai Patel
ABSTRACT
The Statue of Unity is a colossal statue of Indian
statesman and independence activist Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
(1875–1950) who was the first Home minister of India and the chief
adherent of Mahatma Gandhi during the non-violent Indian
Independence movement; highly respected for his leadership in
uniting the 562 princely states of India to form the single large
Union of India. It is located in the state of Gujarat, India. It is the
world's tallest statue with a height of 182 meters (597 ft). It is
located on a river island facing the Sardar Sarovar Dam on river
Narmada in Kevadiya colony, 100 kilometers (62 mi) southeast of
the city of Vadodara.
The project was first announced in 2010 and the
construction of statue started in October 2013 by Larsen & Toubro,
who received the contract for 2,989 crore (US$420 million). It was
designed by Indian sculptor Ram V. Sutar, and was inaugurated by
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 31 October 2018, the
143rd anniversary of Patel's birth.
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CONTENTS
1.INTRODUCTION
2. LITERATURE REVIEW
3. METHODOLOGY
5. CONCLUSION …………………………………………… 23
6.REFERENCES …………………………………………… 24
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1.INTRODUCTION
1.1 HISTORY
Narendra Modi first announced the project to commemorate Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel on 7 October 2010 at a press conference to mark the
beginning of his 10th year as the Chief Minister of Gujarat. At the time, the
project was dubbed, "Gujarat's tribute to the nation". A special purpose
vehicle named the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Rashtriya Ekta Trust (SVPRET)
was constituted by the Government of Gujarat for executing the project.
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Ram V. Sutar
The nearly 600-foot-tall Statue of Unity, completed on November 1, is a bronze
duplicate of India’s first deputy prime minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. It was
designed and master planned by Michael Graves Architecture & Design (MGA) and
is intended to anchor what will eventually become a resort.
The monument took eight years to design and four to build. Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, at the time still the chief minister of Gujarat, first proposed
the sculpture in 2010 and construction began in 2014. The statue proper, designed
by Indian sculptor Ram V. Sutar, reaches nearly 50-stories tall and sits on a three-
tiered base that boosts the height to its record-breaking status.
The geometrically-sculpted base sits on its own riverine island and is connected to
the mainland via a pedestrian and road bridge. Inside, guests are met with a
visitor’s center, hotel, and an exhibition hall, all of which is topped with a
memorial garden.
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2.LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Why India needs statue of Unity
If there is one country in the world that understands the importance of national
unity, it is the United States of America. After all it fought a civil war to preserve it.
That’s why the first memorial to Abraham Lincoln, the man who fought to keep
the country together, came up in 1868, just three years after his assassination, at the
District of Columbia City Hall.
But that was not enough. By the turn of the century, demand had grown for a
grander memorial. With a $300,000 budget, and after raising its height to 19 feet
because 10 feet just didn’t seem tall enough, it was inaugurated in 1922.
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Remarkably, this social investment was made during the Roaring Twenties,
a decade when the US economy grew by 42 per cent and mass manufacturing
brought consumer goods within reach of more Americans than ever before.
India is experiencing a similar rate of economic growth, but that’s not the only
reason why a 182-metre statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel — twice the height of
the Statue of Liberty — seems apt right now.
The Lincoln memorials were built to remind a once deeply divided country about
the man who brought it together. It is worth remembering that they were built by
people worrying about a country where people spoke one primary language and
followed one principal faith — two of the most potent reasons that break nations
apart.
There was, of course, no such uniformity of language or religion in India that more
than five hundred princely states could be merged — without, as Soviet premier
Nikolai Bulganin noted, eliminating the princes. That no royal head rolled during
the integration of princely states with British India
to create the modern nation state was almost entirely due to Vallabhbhai Patel.
Moreover, as Patel biographer P. N. Chopra noted, “Sardar’s India was greater in
size than that of Samudragupta, Asoka and Akbar, and the writ of the Centre
wielded an authority and respect never dreamt of by these great rulers.” This is
why it is apt that the statue of Patel is called the “Statue of Unity”.
There are at least 15 statues of Jawaharlal Nehru around India, including by Ram
Vanji Sutar, who has designed the Statue of Unity. There are statues of M K
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Gandhi in nearly 70 countries, one of the most recent being the one that came up in
2015 at London’s Parliament Square, after a well-publicised campaign led by
economist-politician Meghnad Desai.
True, Patel also had a couple of statues to his name, but none that recognised his
contribution to the national movement on par — as it undoubtedly was — with
Gandhi and Nehru. That is why, when Rajmohan Gandhi wrote his book on Patel
more than two decades ago, he complained that while praise given to Gandhi was
dutiful, and to Nehru fulsome, it was niggardly about Patel.
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But perhaps the most important void that the Statue of Unity might fill is that of
the trio that led India’s struggle for freedom only Patel never told his story. Both
Gandhi and Nehru wrote voluminously about the saga as they saw it. But Patel,
when asked by his daughter why he didn’t write his version, famously said that
some write history and others create it.
But this statue might just fill the gap.
2.2The Tallest statue in the World
The ‘Statue of Unity’ (SOU) is dedicated to the Iron Man of India,
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.
Sardar Patel is widely considered to be the architect of modern India.
The SoU will stand tall as an inspiration to future generations, a reminder of
Sardar Patel’s sterling contribution.At 182 meters from the road entry and 208.5
meters from the river entry, the SoU will be the tallest statue in the world; taller
than the 153 m tall Spring Temple Buddha in China and almost twice as tall as the
world famous Statue of Liberty in New York.
For a sense of its height, the statue is 100 times larger than a man of average
height of about 5 to 5 and a half feet!
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Museum Elevator
2.3Engineering Challenges
Wind, Earthquakes
Situated right in the middle of the river Narmada, the statue is exposed to
the tunnel effect of winds blowing down the river.
Studies of wind patterns over the years revealed wind speeds of 39 m per
second (roughly translated into 130 km/hr. ) could buffet the statue in a
worst-case scenario.
The challenge is not only of the wind blowing against the statue but the
succession effect it creates at the back of the statue that had to considered
in the structural design.
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The Sardar’s legs are clad in a dhoti, his feet in chappals and in a walking
pose that means that the statue is most slender at the base.
The walking pose also opened up a gap of 6.4 meters between the two feet
which then had to be tested to withstand wind velocity.
The face
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Since Patel’s face was an important aspect, special care was taken in casting
the facial features that had to be as close as possible to the Sardar’s face.
The statue is also supposed to appear as if it is walking on water, towards
the Sardar Sarovar dam, with its left leg slightly forward.
The actual features of the Sardar were decided through a participative
exercise involving thousands of people.
A mock-up was created and exhibited for people to see and comment on it.
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Bailey’sBridge
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BRONZE
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3.METHODOLOGY
3.1 STRUCTURAL DESIGN
Part of the statue enclosed inside the 8mm bronze cladding is a two-layered
structure.
The innermost layer has two 127-metre-high towers made of reinforced
cement concrete.
These towers rise up to the chest area.
The steel frame between the towers and the cladding forms the second layer.
One, unlike the Statue of Liberty and Christ the Redeemer, the Statue of Unity
does not have a wider base.
Two, the base of the statue, below the dhoti-clad legs, is about 25 metres high,
equivalent to an eight-storey building.
This part of the structure houses two massive lifts, which can carry over 25
people to a 135-metre high gallery in just above half a minute.
Fitting these vibration-causing machines inside the statue’s two vertical
cores, the first of its three layers, was a challenge for the engineers.
Three, engineers had to factor in the speed of wind, and the possibility of
earthquakes and flood.
Being built on an island in the middle of Narmada, the statue will have to
face the tunnel effect of winds blowing down the river.
The walking pose of the statue opened up a gap of 6.4 metres between the
two feet.
To deal with these issues, the cladding used in the statue has overlapping
panels, which allow it to move vertically and horizontally, to resist
earthquake and wind forces.
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Four, the statue’s location amidst remote, mountainous terrain made transportation
of equipment and material difficult.
To make the movement to the island easier, the engineers banked on the fact
that the island remains accessible from one side of the river via land for at
least eight months post monsoon as water in the channel recedes.
A rock bridge was built over shallow water and a temporary Bailey bridge
was constructed for the monsoon, when there is more water in the river.
Over 210,000 cubic metres of cement concrete, 18,500 tonnes of reinforced
steel, 6,500 tonnes of structural steel, 1,700 tonnes of bronze, and around
1,850 tonnes of bronze cladding, made up of some 565 macro and 6,000
micro panels, were used to build the statue.
Most of this material was moved using the two bridges.
3.2CONSTRUCTION
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offered cash and land compensation, and have been provided jobs. People
of Kevadia, Kothi, Waghodia, Limbdi, Navagam, and Gora villages opposed
the construction of the statue and demanded the restitution of the land
rights over 375 hectares (927 acres) of land acquired earlier for the dam as
well as the formation of new Garudeshwar subdistrict. They also opposed
the formation of Kevadia Area Development Authority (KADA) and the
construction of Garudeshwar weir-cum-causeway project. The government
of Gujarat accepted their demands.
Construction of the monument was completed in mid-October 2018; and
the inaugural ceremony was held on 31 October 2018, presided over by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The statue has been described as a tribute
to Indian engineering skills.
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4.2 TOURISM
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Light and sound show Statue of Unity, as seen from the highway
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Statue of Unity, as seen across the lawns. Signage and map at Statue of Unity.
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5.CONCLUSION
Statue of Unity is truly an engineering marvel. It is a tribute to Indian
engineering skills. Our skilled labourers, architects and engineers have
received immense appreciation for constructing this intricately
designed enormous piece of art. We are proud to have the tallest
statue of the world in our country.
FUTURE PLANS
As of November 2018, construction was still in progress around the
statue for various aspects of the project.
As per the government, there are plans to introduce alternate means of
transport to improve accessibility to the memorial, including a boat
service.
An amphibian bus from Kevadiya is also planned as is a jetty service
from the site of the Sardar Sarovar dam and a ropeway.
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6. REFERENCES
1. "Gujarat: Sardar Patel statue to be twice the size of Statue of Liberty". CNN-IBN.
30 October 2013. Archived from the original on 31 October 2013. Retrieved 30
October 2013.
2. "Gujarat: Statue of Unity expected to attract 10,000 tourists daily". The Times
of India. 31 October 2018. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
4. "For iron to build Sardar Patel statue, Modi goes to farmers". The Indian
Express. 8 July 2013. Archived from the original on 1 November 2013.
Retrieved 30 October 2013.
5."Pan-India panel for Modi's unity show in iron". The New Indian
Express. Archived from the original on 18 November 2013. Retrieved 15
November 2013.
6. Raja, Aditi (2018-09-23). "Iron Man 2.0". The Indian Express. Retrieved 2018-
11-16.
7. "Large number of people run for unity". ToI. Archived from the original on 24
December 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
8. Menon, V.P. (15 September 19554). Integration of the Indian States. Bangalore:
Orient Blackswan.
9.John, Paul (30 October 2016). "Iron man statue is outsourcing magnet". The
Times of India. Retrieved 9 November 2018.
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