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Restoring a monument
T.S. SUBRAMANIAN RECENTLY IN SIEM REAP
The ASI is restoring the Ta Prohm Buddhist temple complex in Cambodia, which attracts hundreds of tourists every day.
Creepers entwine the silk-cotton tree to form a trellis over a shrine at Ta Prohm.
WHEN D.S. Sood stepped into the Hall of Dancers at Ta Prohm, the Buddhist monastic temple complex in Siem Reap province of Cambodia, in December 2004 he shuddered at the ruins he saw before him. Sood, a Deputy Superintending Archaeological Engineer with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), is a veteran of several challenging restoration projects in Sanchi, Khajuraho, Bhopal, Gwalior and Mandu in India, and at Angkor Wat in Cambodia itself. But the devastation that he saw in the Hall of Dancers and other structures in Ta Prohm complex was too much for him.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex before its restoration.
The Ta Prohm complex was built by the Khmer king Jayavarman VII circa 1181. Originally called Rajavihara (the royal temple), it comprised a sanctum sanctorum and 39 other shrines topped with vimanas (towers), galleries, causeways and entrance gate gopura s, among other structures. The king dedicated the complex to his mother, Rajachudamani. The sanctum had an image of Pragnya Paramita, the goddess of wisdom, and it was installed in 1186 CE. The image was modelled on the kings mother. Two shrines in the third enclosure were dedicated to Jayavarman VIIs guru and his brother. The Hall of Dancers was Ta Prohms centrepiece, with 48 pillars supporting its corbelled roof. The pillars had exquisite carvings of dancing apsaras, elephants, men astride horses, floral motifs, and so on. Its walls had niches with friezes of Bodhisatvas and mythical animals.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex during its restoration.
The Hall of Dancers was in total ruins. We had no access to it, Sood said, recalling his first foray into it. The ceiling had completely collapsed and it was lying in pieces on the floor. Most of the pillars were broken in two or three pieces. The porches had caved in, he added. There was chaos, with architectural members, lintel beams and broken pillars lying all around. The entire structure was clogged with water and there was a few feet of silt. What was benumbing was that three monstrously tall silk-cotton trees [ Ceiba pentandra] had grown inside the hall, dislodging its sandstone blocks, driving cracks in the wall and heaving up the floor. The vegetation had penetrated the foundation and it was not safe for tourists to go inside, he said, as he displayed pictures of the ruins taken in 2004.
Cut to June 24, 2012. This is our work yard, Sood said softly and showed a group of visiting Indians how two broken pieces of a sandstone pillar with elegant carvings had been riveted together using steel pins by the ASI team led by him. The visiting Indian team was led by T. Satyamurthy, former Superintending Archaeologist, ASI. The air buzzed with the noise of small drilling machines boring holes into broken sandstone blocks. Some men were assiduously joining them together. The pillars were from the Hall of Dancers. They bore numbers: obviously Sood and his team had documented them, knowing where they would fit in. If some pillars or architectural members are missing, we get the sandstone blocks from the original quarry in the Kulen mountains, about 35 km from here. In our restoration and conservation efforts, we have used only the original stones, and new stones only occasionally when it was totally necessary, said T.K. Ganju, Senior Conservation Assistant, ASI.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex after its restoration.
We are a team of five from the ASI, said Sood.
Sood, Ganju, and E.P. Biswas and H. Raghavendra, both senior draftsmen of the ASI, led us inside the complex. There were stunning sights everywhere. A 30-metre-tall silk-cotton tree soared into the sky with its massive roots gripping a vimana. The roots had formed a trellis over the carvings above the shrines doorway. The vimana was in a precarious position, with the tree having dislodged its sandstone blocks. In fact, 25 silk-cotton trees, each more than 200 years old and 30-40 metres tall, have taken over the entire complex, splitting the blocks of stones and uprooting the galleries, causeways, shrines, pillars, lintel beams, and many other structures. The corbelled roofs have caved in and the entrance gate gopuras look pathetic with the stone blocks dislodged from their places.
Signs of vandalism are everywhere. Friezes of Bodhisatvas have been hacked away. Again, what would have been a series of bas-reliefs of beautiful Bodhisatvas on the wall of the gallery between the third and fourth enclosures have been chopped off.
Apart from trees and vandalism, frequent shifting of the capital, and invasions and internal strife played havoc with Ta Prohm, Bayon, Bantea Srei, Beng Mealea, Prasat Kravan and other temple complexes in the province. When the capital was shifted from Siem Reap, this area was neglected and Ta Prohm fell into ruins. Many trees began to grow on its structures causing their collapse. That is why Ta Prohm is popularly called Tree Temple, Ganju said.
RESTORATION WORK GOING on at the Hall of Dancers.
Right now, restoration is under way in the hall. A tower crane is being used to lift and put aside the fallen architectural members after they are numbered and measured in situ. The laterite apron along the plinth has already been exposed and strengthened. The joining of broken pillars or architectural members using threaded steel pins, epoxy and polymer is in progress. The transformation that the complex has been undergoing is unbelievable. Sood said: Documents were prepared to find out where the stones belonged because entire structures had collapsed.
The ASI documented every stone member layer by layer and grid by grid; measured every sandstone block for its length, height and width; and recorded their quality and orientation. The entire hall was photographed bit by bit. Then the dismantling of the floor was done, the soil was treated appropriately and sandstone blocks of the floor and the plinth were reset. The original broken stones of the floors, columns and roof were repaired and joined with appropriate material and threaded with steel pins. It was ensured that all architectural members achieved the desired structural strength before they were reassembled.
T.S. SUBRAMANIAN RECENTLY IN SIEM REAP
The ASI is restoring the Ta Prohm Buddhist temple complex in Cambodia, which attracts hundreds of tourists every day.
Creepers entwine the silk-cotton tree to form a trellis over a shrine at Ta Prohm.
WHEN D.S. Sood stepped into the Hall of Dancers at Ta Prohm, the Buddhist monastic temple complex in Siem Reap province of Cambodia, in December 2004 he shuddered at the ruins he saw before him. Sood, a Deputy Superintending Archaeological Engineer with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), is a veteran of several challenging restoration projects in Sanchi, Khajuraho, Bhopal, Gwalior and Mandu in India, and at Angkor Wat in Cambodia itself. But the devastation that he saw in the Hall of Dancers and other structures in Ta Prohm complex was too much for him.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex before its restoration.
The Ta Prohm complex was built by the Khmer king Jayavarman VII circa 1181. Originally called Rajavihara (the royal temple), it comprised a sanctum sanctorum and 39 other shrines topped with vimanas (towers), galleries, causeways and entrance gate gopura s, among other structures. The king dedicated the complex to his mother, Rajachudamani. The sanctum had an image of Pragnya Paramita, the goddess of wisdom, and it was installed in 1186 CE. The image was modelled on the kings mother. Two shrines in the third enclosure were dedicated to Jayavarman VIIs guru and his brother. The Hall of Dancers was Ta Prohms centrepiece, with 48 pillars supporting its corbelled roof. The pillars had exquisite carvings of dancing apsaras, elephants, men astride horses, floral motifs, and so on. Its walls had niches with friezes of Bodhisatvas and mythical animals.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex during its restoration.
The Hall of Dancers was in total ruins. We had no access to it, Sood said, recalling his first foray into it. The ceiling had completely collapsed and it was lying in pieces on the floor. Most of the pillars were broken in two or three pieces. The porches had caved in, he added. There was chaos, with architectural members, lintel beams and broken pillars lying all around. The entire structure was clogged with water and there was a few feet of silt. What was benumbing was that three monstrously tall silk-cotton trees [ Ceiba pentandra] had grown inside the hall, dislodging its sandstone blocks, driving cracks in the wall and heaving up the floor. The vegetation had penetrated the foundation and it was not safe for tourists to go inside, he said, as he displayed pictures of the ruins taken in 2004.
Cut to June 24, 2012. This is our work yard, Sood said softly and showed a group of visiting Indians how two broken pieces of a sandstone pillar with elegant carvings had been riveted together using steel pins by the ASI team led by him. The visiting Indian team was led by T. Satyamurthy, former Superintending Archaeologist, ASI. The air buzzed with the noise of small drilling machines boring holes into broken sandstone blocks. Some men were assiduously joining them together. The pillars were from the Hall of Dancers. They bore numbers: obviously Sood and his team had documented them, knowing where they would fit in. If some pillars or architectural members are missing, we get the sandstone blocks from the original quarry in the Kulen mountains, about 35 km from here. In our restoration and conservation efforts, we have used only the original stones, and new stones only occasionally when it was totally necessary, said T.K. Ganju, Senior Conservation Assistant, ASI.
The causeway in the Ta Prohm complex after its restoration.
We are a team of five from the ASI, said Sood.
Sood, Ganju, and E.P. Biswas and H. Raghavendra, both senior draftsmen of the ASI, led us inside the complex. There were stunning sights everywhere. A 30-metre-tall silk-cotton tree soared into the sky with its massive roots gripping a vimana. The roots had formed a trellis over the carvings above the shrines doorway. The vimana was in a precarious position, with the tree having dislodged its sandstone blocks. In fact, 25 silk-cotton trees, each more than 200 years old and 30-40 metres tall, have taken over the entire complex, splitting the blocks of stones and uprooting the galleries, causeways, shrines, pillars, lintel beams, and many other structures. The corbelled roofs have caved in and the entrance gate gopuras look pathetic with the stone blocks dislodged from their places.
Signs of vandalism are everywhere. Friezes of Bodhisatvas have been hacked away. Again, what would have been a series of bas-reliefs of beautiful Bodhisatvas on the wall of the gallery between the third and fourth enclosures have been chopped off.
Apart from trees and vandalism, frequent shifting of the capital, and invasions and internal strife played havoc with Ta Prohm, Bayon, Bantea Srei, Beng Mealea, Prasat Kravan and other temple complexes in the province. When the capital was shifted from Siem Reap, this area was neglected and Ta Prohm fell into ruins. Many trees began to grow on its structures causing their collapse. That is why Ta Prohm is popularly called Tree Temple, Ganju said.
RESTORATION WORK GOING on at the Hall of Dancers.
Right now, restoration is under way in the hall. A tower crane is being used to lift and put aside the fallen architectural members after they are numbered and measured in situ. The laterite apron along the plinth has already been exposed and strengthened. The joining of broken pillars or architectural members using threaded steel pins, epoxy and polymer is in progress. The transformation that the complex has been undergoing is unbelievable. Sood said: Documents were prepared to find out where the stones belonged because entire structures had collapsed.
The ASI documented every stone member layer by layer and grid by grid; measured every sandstone block for its length, height and width; and recorded their quality and orientation. The entire hall was photographed bit by bit. Then the dismantling of the floor was done, the soil was treated appropriately and sandstone blocks of the floor and the plinth were reset. The original broken stones of the floors, columns and roof were repaired and joined with appropriate material and threaded with steel pins. It was ensured that all architectural members achieved the desired structural strength before they were reassembled.