Bruno Dias Souza | |
Nationality: | Indian |
Birth Name: | Bruno Dias Souza |
Birth Date: | 6 October 1925 |
Birth Place: | Goa, Portuguese India, Portuguese Empire (now in India) |
Alma Mater: | Columbia (B.Arch, 1955), Harvard (M.Arch, 1957) |
Spouse: | Edna Miranda Souza |
Children: | 4 |
Awards: | Sócio Honorário -- Ordem dos Arquitectos (Portugal) |
Significant Buildings: | Government Primary Schools in Portuguese Goa; Community Hall at Sto. Estevam (Goa), Cine Alankar at Mapusa Goa, Sesa Goa Head Office at Panjim; first prize at Goa High Court Contest, second prize at Goa Assembly Building Competition, Junior Staff Quarters Embassy of Brazil at New Delhi, Indian Social Institute at New Delhi, Okhla Parish Church at New Delhi, Indian Institute of Management at Calcutta, Education Development Centre (UNESCO), Maldives. |
Bruno Dias Souza (born 6 October 1925) is an Indian architect. He is credited with having "belonged to a generation of architects that sought to rediscover what Modern architecture meant for India"[1] and having had an "illustrious architectural career".
Souza is known to have grown up in the Goa village of Badem, Salvador do Mundo, and building models of boats and little houses as a child. He was educated at the Liceu Nacional Afonso de Albuquerque in the then Portuguese-ruled Goa. He moved to Dharwad and Bombay for inter-science and a stint in mathematics and physics as part of the B.Sc. programme at St Xavier's College. After his undergraduation and postgraduation in the United States, he worked for international firms in Central as well as South America—including in Brasilia, Brasil, before returning to Goa. In Goa, still under Portuguese rule, he designed government primary and secondary schools.
Souza was educated at Columbia and Harvard. He spent his early years as a young professor and practitioner at the prominent School of Planning and Architecture (SPA), in New Delhi. He also served as a United Nations consultant, won the national competition for the Goa High Court, besides receiving a special honor from the Government of Portugal.His acclaimed works include Okhla Parish Church and Loretto Convent in New Delhi, his own house Altinho in Panjim, Goa, the Goa Assembly, and other World Bank-UNESCO projects.Souza has worked on projects in Sudan, Vietnam, Liberia, Republic of Cape Verde and the Republic of Guinea.[2] He served as the Director of the School of Planning and Architecture from 1983 to 1988. In Goa, Souza has been critical of bureaucratic functioning and corruption in the system, where he won two competitions but was edged out of the same.[3]
Souza has argued that the Goan capital of Panjim is "forgetting its past by trying to redesign open spaces." He has argued that the scenic capital "was a space of parks...."[4]