Understanding the Site
One of the most striking observations during the site study was the contrast between the official status of the site and its everyday reality. Although access to the factory is restricted, the surrounding communities have gradually appropriated its edges for daily activities. Children play near its boundaries, people walk along its periphery, and informal interactions continue around the site. Nature has also reclaimed large portions of the abandoned land, allowing vegetation to coexist with industrial ruins.
These observations shifted my understanding of the site. Instead of treating it merely as an abandoned industrial complex, I began to see it as an urban void waiting to reconnect with the city. The land that once became a source of immense loss could now become a place that gives something back to the people who continue to live around it.
The intention of the project is therefore not to erase history, but to preserve it while creating opportunities for remembrance, learning, community engagement, and public life.
Design Approach
The proposal is structured around three conceptual axes derived directly from the existing site:
• Axis of Catastrophe - Derived from the alignment of the main factory building where Methyl Isocyanate (MIC) gas was manufactured. This axis represents the origin of the disaster and becomes the primary narrative spine of the project.
• Axis of Witness - Derived from the existing roadside memorial dedicated to the victims of the tragedy. It establishes a visual and emotional connection between the city and the site, acknowledging collective memory and remembrance.
• Lines of Continuity - Derived from the existing internal road network of the factory. These lines reconnect the fragmented site with its surroundings
Spatial Organisation
The placement of every intervention is informed by the intersection of these three guiding systems.
• Museum - Positioned at the intersection of the Axis of Catastrophe and the Lines of Continuity, the museum narrates the industrial history of the site, the events of the disaster, and the broader themes of environmental responsibility and resilience.
• Memorial - Located where the Axis of Catastrophe intersects with the Axis of Witness, creating a contemplative space that honours the victims and preserves collective memory.
• Existing Factory - Rather than demolishing the industrial remains, the proposal preserves the existing factory as the central witness of history.
• Community Follies - At every major intersection along the Lines of Continuity, a series of six architectural follies are introduced. These interventions respond directly to the surrounding communities and provide spaces for gathering, learning & recreation.
Individual design philosophy
Museum
The museum is embedded below ground to minimise its visual impact and preserve the site’s openness. At its core, there is a Death Well receives two water channels-one from the Reflection Pool and the other from the Axis of Catastrophe-symbolising loss and remembrance. An oculus above forms a Light Well that resembles an industrial reactor, recalling the site’s industrial past. Suspended between the two is an experiential chamber that evokes the claustrophobia experienced during the gas tragedy, while galleries and a memorial hall complete the museum’s narrative journey.
Memorial
The memorial emerges as a monolithic concrete form rising from the landscape, symbolising the permanence of collective memory. At its center, the existing roadside memorial statue is relocated and surrounded by an eternal flame, where fire and the flowing water channel intersect to represent loss and hope. A gabion wall at the center of the monolith block contains stones equal to the official number of lives lost stands as a silent tribute to the victims, while a single ray of light from above illuminates the memorial, reinforcing remembrance and reflection. At the top, a solitary bell marks the anniversary of the tragedy each year.
Existing Factory
Around the existing factory a large reflection pool is introduced around the structure, reinforcing silence, contemplation, and the emotional weight of the catastrophe while allowing the ruins to remain visually dominant.
Folly 1 - Public Washroom
In factory I observed that many elements like pipes, tanks, and processing units are not placed on ground but are held within a structural system. So I translated that idea by suspending the restroom cube within a metal grid, and also it is floating in air making users experience that condition at a human scale.
Folly 2 – Info. & Ticket Kiosk
During my site visit I observed that the factory and the surrounding community exist side by side but are still disconnected. So instead of merging them, I tried to express that condition through two parallel walls where interaction happens, but the separation remains.
Folly 3 - Garden Of Reflection
This folly is very imp because it is perpendicular to the museum , so instead of adding activity, I created a pause with The field mirrored columns on the water allow people to see themselves, and walking through water slows them down, making the experience more introspective.
Folly 4 – Community Pavillion
I derived this pavilion from the movement patterns of people around the factory during the disaster, where paths were chaotic. So I translated those flows into curved walls, creating a flexible space for community use today.
Folly 5 – Unity Bowl
Since most of the site is fragmented and individual, I wanted to create one space where people come together. The amphitheatre naturally brings people inward, and the suspended cone acts as a central focus, inspired by industrial elements that are held within structural systems.
Folly 6 – Community Kitchen
I have noticed in main factory the ground floor is free and the units are above it so in these. The elevated volume within a structural frame recalls industrial systems where functional units are held within a larger supporting structure.