In two important ways—in emphasising the mohalla concept, and in respecting contours. Mohallas were different from gridded neighbourhoods. They were inward-looking, and in the middle was a public space, for a market or performance (this was in the case of planned towns. In older towns, mohallas were homes or shops that grew around a large haveli or institution, around which a gali shaped its way). The city shaped itself. It did not have a blueprint. Days before he died Nowicki had written a postcard to Albert Mayer, quoting those famous lines in the Bhagvad Gita: ‘Do not look to the fruit of your action’. That is what he did. He wanted a city that Indians would be happy with. As a Polish refugee, he was sensitive to feelings in Punjab. His city had a public area with secretariat buildings, with the hills as a dramatic backdrop. He also did something that American and many Indian planners ignore—he looked at the landscape, at contours. They run the right-angled lines through the map. With Nowicki, there was a curvature in the map. If you look at Corbusier you’d think the land was as flat as a table. It took another generation for Indian architects to use words like ‘gali’ and ‘mohalla’. This pause, which made them wonder whether American planning and modernist architecture were truly universal, happened in 1980. The architect Bijit Ghosh achieved two revolutions in Indian architectural thought—he smuggled in the term ‘vernacular’ to make people think of traditions of house-building. He sponsored an exhibition to celebrate New Delhi, the city of Lutyens, which till then had been shrugged off as Indo-Saracenic, an embarrassment.