In 1817, a Himalayan explorer, Captain Alexander Gerard, came across a small village, Shimla, at the foothills of the Himalayas. Within 50 years, it became the summer capital of British India. Today, Shimla is spread across 5,131 sq km, 98 per cent of which is rural. The other 2 per cent is the city of Shimla. Pooja Sharma, a 32-year-old resident, has witnessed how the serene city became a concrete jungle with water problems. “When I was a child, two-storey houses was the norm,” she says. Now, there are multi-storeyed buildings, and the city went through a water crisis between 2016 and 2018.