When architecture is formed out of the mere wish for spectacle, it sinks to a new irrelevance. Foreign funds and transnational businesses have little concern for culture and heritage. Forgetting all local characteristics, a misplaced architecture emerges out of what cultural anthropologists describe as ‘slash and burn’ history. At one time, the larger cultural view of architecture was necessary to project an identity of a people, a region, even a nation. At its very core, architecture stood as an emblem of national unity. The persistence of a long-established building tradition so crucial to that suggestion hardly needed stating. It grew instead—as in the arts of painting, sculpture and craft—as an unselfconscious expression conveying a multitude of influences, beliefs and adaptations. A mere glance down a street of traditional buildings confirmed they could be nothing else but Indian. In small places far removed from the cosmopolitan structure of larger cities, there still remains something of India’s enriching legacy. Stone houses in Jaisalmer, the white courtyards of Udaipur, Bohra houses in Gujarat, and the odd stone monuments are now—like much of the country’s valuable history—closer to archeology than architecture, living as they do under the shadow of the glass shopping mall. Yet, all around in the neighbourhood, cultural concerns are still being carefully modulated in a local language.