Work update
Nov '01
The crane comes down..
Preparations for one of the most visible
changes in years have been underway for the last several
weeks. We are preparing to remove the crane, which has stood
on top of Matrimandir for the last 21 years.
With an overall length of 30 meters and
a height of approximately 6 meters the crane has served the
Matrimandir exceedingly well over the last two decades.
The crane was built here in the
Matrimandir workshop during 1979-80 when we were preparing for
the upcoming job of lifting into place the 1100 pre-cast
concrete beams, each weighing up to 400 kgs, that were to make
up the spherical space-frame of Matrimandir.
The actual lifting of the crane into place
This was a major event - as it was
recorded by a Matrimandir worker, Sept.13,1980:
"Today is the day of the
crane. All the pieces are ready, totally ready. The two towers
which fit into each other and which sit inside the top ring,
the 20 mtr boom and the 10 mtr counter-weight. Also everything
is ready on top: the old crane has been removed and a big pipe
structure erected, sticking out 4 mtr outside and above the
walls of the Chamber and meant to hoist up the towers and the
boom. The work on the crane, down and around the workshop, has
been the only work for months at Matrimandir.
[ ] A lot of
pipe work, fitting, grinding, painting, and then testing.
About three weeks ago we tried to put 1-1/2 tons on the end of
the boom, which we had fixed to the main tower, but at one ton
already some of the pipes of the main tower started bending a
little. That meant another week of reinforcing."
Then large teams of Aurovilians carried
the four pieces down into the excavation of Matrimandir, and,
one by one they were winched by hand into place high on top of
the structure.
Work over the years..
-
Beams for the space frame:
over the years which followed the crane lifted the beams
that form the space-frame in a steady process which went
on day by day until 1987. Then the concrete for the
massive top cap of Matrimandir was lifted for the
prolonged concreting which was completed on the
significant date of 8.8.88 !
-
White marble for Chamber: the
crane's attention was then turned to the Inner Chamber,
for the completion of the Chamber was the next task before
us. The 1140 slabs of pristine white marble that make up
the twelve inner walls of the Chamber were carefully
lifted up by the crane. These slabs, having come to
Auroville from Italy in 1978 slept for years in the
Amphitheater's underground rooms before being hoisted
through the Tamil Nadu sunshine to their final station
during 1989-90. o Having lifted Plaster of Paris for the
ceiling and Rajasthan marble for the floor, as well as the
four doors of the Inner Room - massive 6 cm slabs of white
Italian marble, the crane then faced the toughest task it
had ever been asked to meet: lifting the 12 huge columns
that stand inside the Chamber.
-
The twelve columns: weighing
in at over 800 kgs per column, each with its multiple
coats of brilliant white paint and wrapped for protection
in specially made mattress covers, these columns were
lifted one by one over a period of several months up to
the Chamber level. They were swung into a horizontal
position outside the rib of the structure then moved
carefully in on wheels through the Chamber door and
winched gradually to their final standing positions.
-
The crystal globe: after
tackling its heaviest load, the crane was entrusted to
lift its most precious one: the 450 kg crystal globe for
the centre of the room. After checking the steel cables of
the crane and ensuring that all was OK, the crane control
button was pushed on April 27th, 1991 and, holding our
breath a hundred Aurovilians watched the cubical wooden
box holding the priceless globe rise into the air. The
trip to the Chamber level was over within a matter of
minutes. The crane had done its job flawlessly once again.
-
Ferro-cement triangles: after
the Chamber was completed the crane took up the job of
lifting the hundreds of ferro-cement triangles that were
fixed to the concrete space-frame to make up the solid
outer skin of Matrimandir. That task was done during the
years 1992 to 1995. Then, for a while, the crane had a
little rest. It was perhaps meditating on what it had done
and looking forward to it's last and most visible task -
to lift into place the hundreds of golden discs that now
dress the outer skin of Matrimandir.
-
The golden disks: after a few
trials with different samples of discs, the definitive
lifting job started in early January 1999 and still
continues today. Now the disc fixation has reached to just
below the equator level of Matrimandir, and that is as far
down as we can go using the crane, for the subsequent
rows, where the sphere curves inwards, cannot be reached
by the crane without risk of damaging the golden discs
above. So the career of the crane, long and illustrious,
is at an end.
Time to bring it down. Scaffolding has
been built up from ground level to support the long lifting
arm of the crane, and arms and towers were cut into short
pieces. Carefully, so as not to damage any of the golden discs
below, these pieces were lowered by rope and pulley to the
ground, and on Monday November 5th it was done.
This is truly the end of an era in the
life of the Matrimandir construction work.
There is more than one
generation of young Aurovilians who have never seen
Matrimandir without its crane! For more than twenty years,
school children here, when asked to make colour drawings of
the finished Matrimandir, have almost always drawn the
finished building with the crane still sitting on top!
Now they can see, as do we all, the
shape of Matrimandir in its spherical purity. But in our
hearts there will be many of us - not only the children - who
will still see that crane perched high up on Matrimandir, and
will remember it fondly and with gratitude.

These and many more 'Matrimandir kid cards'
were made by Aurovilian kiddies some 13, 14 years
ago.. On Saturday mornings the children used to come, often
riding their ponies, to the MM Office which was then still on
the site itself. It was there that they made innumerable
colourful and touching cards, many of which were sent in a
thank-you letter to people in India and abroad who financially
helped us building the structure. (And what joy when an extra
check was sent in return.., the pride of the kids of
participating in this way..!)
On the backside of the cards the kids would write their own
good wishes.. One of them read: "With much love from
MatriMyDear.."
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