Try as he might, Jeff Bezosβs Amazon cannot compensate for the magic of a bookstore in the flesh: the smell of new books multiplied a hundredfold, the crisp sound of freshly printed pages being reverently read, flipped, folded and averred. But when both community and entertainment lie only a buttonβs press away today, how do you get individuals to venture out of their lonesome bubbles and congregate in a third space? It was this pertinent question that the design firm groupDCA was tasked with when redesigning a 1,000 sq ft bookstore in Kolkata.Β
The firm responded to this dilemma by retreating to the past for inspiration β and there was plenty to sift through. The Mesopotamians built their homes around a central courtyard. The Romans climbed up social ladders in public baths. And in India, ancient stepwells helped store rainwater, acting as both a rudimentary water reservoir and a space for congregation, prayer and leisure. And what better muse for a compact shell lacking in width, but blessed with a 7-metre-height?Β



