In the heart of Bhowali’s congested market street in Uttarakhand, North India, where narrow roads wind between concrete facades, a once-forgotten structure now rises quietly but purposefully. This dharamshala—originally built by Jasuli Buri Shaukyani, a 19th-century resident of Dantu village in the Upper Darma Patti of Dharchula—was one of several shelters she commissioned for the Shauka traders of her time. These were not ordinary structures; they were lifelines in an unforgiving Himalayan terrain, offering rest and refuge to a community that spent its life moving across mountains, negotiating weather, altitude, and the politics of trade.
India
How A Dharamshala Was Turned Into A Museum Through Adaptive Reuse In Bhowali, Uttarakhand
Reclaiming memory through architecture, this project restores Jasuli Buri Shaukyani’s historic dharamshala in Bhowali and reimagines it as a community museum that preserves the living heritage of the Rung people

Jasuli Buri Shaukyani’s historic dharamshala in Bhowali Photo: Compartment S4
Jasuli Buri Shaukyani’s historic dharamshala in Bhowali Photo: Compartment S4
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