Move over Central Jail, enter Freedom Park

The Central Jail in Bengaluru has become ‘Freedom Park’, on the lines of the famous Hyde Park in London. Read about the facilities the BBMP is promising.

The most awaited park of the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagar Palike (BBMP), the Freedom Park, opened to the public in November 2008, even as a number of facilities inside are still not functional. This, over-20 acre park, built on the former Central Jail premises on Seshadri Road is mainly constructed for arranging rallies, dharnas and protests and, therefore, not affecting the flow of traffic on such occasions.

garden area inside the park

Garden area inside Freedom Park ( pic: Architects Mathew and Ghosh )

The Freedom Park, now a vital green lung space in fast-concretising Bengaluru, has a long history to it. The plans for the park were finalised as early as 2002. The project was conceived in 2004 and the work started only in 2006 with a cost of Rs.8 crores. The BBMP requested for an enhanced budget of Rs.8 crores for the project and, finally, Rs. 10.27 crores was sanctioned for the entire Freedom Park.

The engineering department of the BBMP is excited about the project and Engineer-in-Chief, A K Gopalaswamy, cannot stop raving about it. "It is a masterpiece in itself. No one imagined that the Central Jail could get this makeover while retaining its historical significance," he says. The barracks and the hospital blocks are being retained as heritage structures, he adds.

The central tower and the prison’s entrance block are the other structures that have found their way into the park. The park has been categorised under six broad areas: general, museum and exhibition, contemporary art, retail, performance spaces and water features. According to the BBMP engineers, some of the areas in the park will have entry fees, which will be used for its maintenance.

Amphitheatre

Amphitheatre ( pic: Architects Mathew and Ghosh )

Five acres of the park would be set aside for arranging rallies and protests, says the BBMP. "This space is on the lines of Hyde Park in London. The maintenance of this park will probably be outsourced," says Gopalaswamy. He explains that delays in awarding contracts have been a key reason for the slack in progress.

The design to convert a prison into a park was done by Soumitro Ghosh and Nisha Mathew Ghosh of Mathew & Ghosh Architects Pvt Limited, a husband and wife team. They were chosen after they won a nation-wide contest in 2003. The competition was initiated by the BBMP and the Bangalore Agenda Task Force. The couple had not worked with BBMP before, though they had carried out a lot of projects for the PWD.

Some of the key points in the park’s construction, according to the architect couple, were "using all sustainable resources, proposing a people’s court of eastern light and western reflection with an eccentric position of the central tower". They say BBMP’s good team spirit helped them a lot in creating this unique place.

old building of the central jail

Old Building of Central Jail. It has been preserved because of its historical significance ( pic: Architects Mathew and Ghosh )

The park has more to it than just the rally area; it has a joggers track (3,000 sq m), children’s play area (5,200 sq m), jail museum, information corridor gallery, book museum, children’s interactive museum in the old cells yard, tree museum and an outdoor exhibition park. The Freedom Wall stretch of the old jail will house a permanent multimedia art sculpture court, pathway junctions, designer souvenir shops, book shop, traditional craft stalls, 150-seater amphitheatre, 50-seater enclosed theatre space and an open plaza for gathering. There will be a water pool at main entrance and natural localised water percolation zones visible only in the rainy season.

All these amenities are yet to become operational, and when they do, Bengaluru will indeed have something special to look forward to.

Comments:

  1. Siri Srinivas says:

    Wow. This one finally got done! Looks awesome. Can’t wait to get there and take a look!

  2. Palahalli Vishwanath says:

    It is great ! Finally the high walls which one has been seeing for years has come down !

  3. Prasanna says:

    This is a good breather for our city – in spite of all the trees felled right outside the campus. Lets hope this place gets much greener and makes up for all the trees that we’ve lost.

  4. Deepa Mohan says:

    It’s really ironic that the authorities should call it Freedom Park, and cut down huge trees outside the campus. Also, the huge wall did look very ugly when we went to meet and plead (unsuccessfully) with the BBMP Empowered Committed not to fell the trees.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Why Uppal is getting hotter: Dense construction and reduced green cover increase temperatures

Data from 2015-2025 reveals how rapid urbanisation has intensified Uppal's heat risks, signaling the urgent need for blue-green infrastructure in Hyderabad.

Uppal is a suburb of Hyderabad, located in the northeastern part of the city. It is known for housing landmarks like the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium and has schools, government offices, industrial zones and commercial centres. The area experiences high temperatures due to the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect that operates within the city limits.  Our examination of Land Surface Temperature (LST) data covered the years 2015, 2020, and 2025 and shows how heat zones have expanded with warmer areas becoming larger. In Uppal, rapid urban development has changed the thermal balance. Dense construction and fewer trees  are creating  persistent…

Similar Story

BDA’s tree plantation drive faces accountability issues, not accounting errors

This record-breaking drive in Bengaluru has cleared out shrub ecosystems rich in biodiversity to plant saplings that may never thrive.

Fifteen lakh trees. A place in the Guinness Book of Records. The Bengaluru Development Authority (BDA) has been on overdrive, promoting its new project to plant 15 lakh trees in spaces created in its new layouts. 240 acres have been earmarked across BDA’s faraway layouts. The saplings are to be planted across lake and nala buffer zones, parks and public spaces in new neighbourhoods like Nadaprabhu Kempegowda Layout, Banashankari 6th Stage, and Dr Shivarama Karanth Layout, according to the BDA Chairman N A Haris. While such massive tree plantation exercises are by themselves questionable, there is also the question of a…