Bhagwan Das Garga

Bhagwan Das Garga
Bhagwan Garga

Sunday, 19 October 2025

 Integrating Material Ropeways into Passenger Ropeway Construction

IntroductionMaterial ropeways efficiently transport construction materials to remote sites, reducing road dependency and costs. Integrating them into passenger ropeway projects streamlines building while preparing for operations.Key Benefits
  • Cost Savings: Cuts transport expenses by 30-50%.
  • Speed: Accelerates construction by 20-30%.
  • Safety: Minimizes road traffic risks.
  • Sustainability: Lowers emissions vs. trucks.
Integration Steps
  1. Planning: Align material ropeway route with passenger alignment during feasibility studies.
  2. Design: Use compatible towers, cables, and cabins (e.g., shared foundations).
  3. Phased Construction: Install material line first to supply passenger components.
  4. Operations: Convert material cabins to passenger use post-construction.
  5. Compliance: Meet standards like EN 12927 and local regs.
Phase
Action
Benefit
Design
Shared infrastructure
15-20% cost reduction
Build
Material supply via ropeway
25% faster timeline
Switchover
Reconfigure cabins
Seamless transition
Case Studies
  • Himalayan Project (India): 5 km material ropeway built passenger line in 14 months (vs. 24 by road).
  • Alpine Resort (Europe): Integrated system saved €2M in logistics.
ConclusionIntegrating material ropeways ensures efficient, eco-friendly passenger ropeway construction. 
Contact M & M Ropeways for expert guidance: 
Email: info@mmropeways.com

M & M Ropeways are leading manufacturers, exporters and suppliers of innovative high-quality material handling equipment, including Aerial Ropeways (material/passenger), Cable Cranes for radial and parallel applications, Conveyors and Winches.







Monday, 18 July 2011

Film scholar BD Garga passes away


Noted film historian and film scholar BD Garga (87) passed away Monday morning following a brief illness.

One of India’s most eminent film scholars, Garga compiled the first film anthology to commemorate the golden jubilee of Indian cinema in 1963. He had written, directed and produced over fifty documentary films in his lifetime. He was also a founding member of the National Film Archive, Pune. He was honoured by the Film Federation of India for his contribution to the growth of cinema in the country. In 1996, he received the first V. Shantaram Award for Lifetime Achievement at the Mumbai International Film Festival.

Among his books are 'So Many Cinemas: The Motion Picture in India' and 'The Art of Cinema: An Insider’s Journey through Fifty Years of Film History.' His book, 'From Raj to Swaraj: The Non-fiction Film in India' won the National Award for the Best Book on Cinema for 2009. His latest, 'Pictorial History of Indian Silent Cinema' was due this year.

Garga who lived in Goa, is survived by his wife and daughter.

Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Garga's book on documentary films wins National Award


Film historian Bhagwan Das Garga's book on the history of documentary films in India, 'From Raj to Swaraj: The Non-fiction Film in India', won the National Award for the Best Book on Cinema published in 2007.
The awards were announced in New Delhi Monday.

Octogenarian B.D. Garga's book 'From Raj to Swaraj...' published by penguin Books-India is an account of the history of non-fiction film-making in India, from the colonial times to the post-Independence era. A product of rigorous archival research, it is full of previously unpublished information and visuals from the author's personal collection.

The book traces the century-old history of newsreels and documentaries in the country. Beginning with an account of the early works of people like Hiralal Sen, J.F. Madan and Harishchandra Bhatwadekar, who pioneered the newsreel, Garga describes what were among the first non-fiction films - Jyotish Sarkar's coverage of the anti-Partition demonstration in Calcutta, 1905, and Charles Urban's spectacular film on the 1911 Delhi Durbar.

Garga also chronicles the landmark events in the development of non-fiction films in India like the propaganda films during the first and second World Wars, the passing of the Cinematograph Act in 1918, the establishment of the Censor Board and Lowell Thomas's journey across the country to film 'Romantic India', Louis de Rochemont's controversial coverage of police repression in 1930, the series of 'The March of Time' films on India and the founding of the film advisory board.

Garga is one of India's most eminent film scholars and a founder member of the National Film Archive, Pune. He began working in films under V. Shantaram and has written, directed and produced over fifty documentary films.

In the fifties, Garga worked with various film units in Europe and at the Mosfilm Studios, Moscow. He later served as a member of the film advisory board and was honoured by the Film Federation of India for his contribution to the growth of cinema in the country.

He is also the author of 'The Art of Cinema: An Insider's Journey through Fifty Years of Film History (published by Penguin-India)' and 'Indian Cinema: A Passage to Bollywood', which will be published by Penguin soon.


Thursday, 23 August 2007

Framed in the celluloid


From Raj To Swaraj: The Non-fiction Film in India
 
Just a little over six months after the initial Paris screening of their 'moving pictures', the Lumiere brothers despatched their representative to a huge market waiting to be tapped - India. The Cinematographe was a brilliant invention and the opening of the Suez Canal had reduced sea journey from four months to three weeks. There was, therefore, no reason to lose time.

The representative arrived at Apollo Bunder in Bombay, and took a horse-drawn carriage to Watson's Hotel, barely half-a-km up the road. It was here that several short-films were exhibited to an all-European audience on July 7, 1896. Come and witness "living photographic pictures in life-size reproductions", the advertisement said. The entry ticket was Re 1 and everyone was delighted with the results.

The era has passed, so has Watson's Hotel. The building, now called Esplanade Mansion, is a dilapidated structure populated mostly by lawyers' chambers and stationery shops. People who occupy these are, by and large, unaware of the history buried inside the debris. Gone too is the 'Kala Ghoda' (a mounted Black Horse) statue - symbol of British imperialism.

What has, however, not disappeared is the concept of cinema. Over the decades, India has achieved the distinction of being the largest movie-making nation in the world. These films are primarily commercial in nature, targeting the Hindi audience. There are also films made in regional languages. Again, there is the distinction of mainstream as well as 'art' cinema.

Then, there is a completely different genre of documentary films. Primarily non-fiction, some of these are often seen in movie-halls prior to the screening of commercial cinema. It is this strain of film that author BD Garga deals with in this book.

From Raj To Swaraj traces the origins of this genre of filmmaking since the early 20th century: About how young and excited photographer HS Bhatwadekar became the first Indian to shoot moving picture as early as 1899. His first two films dealt with two wrestlers and a monkey trainer respectively. Later, he made films on Parsis, affluent then as they are now.

Then, there was a wealthy Parsi from Kolkata, Jamshed Madan, who took over this fledgling 'trade' and converted it into an 'industry'. In 1907, he built the Elphinstone Theatre in Kolkata, which was to be followed by the establishment of three-dozen more such theatres. His team would screen events of local interest, besides films on industries like jute, coal, steel, etc.

The author has spent over 50 years in the business of filmmaking, and his experience gets reflected in the book. Narratives on the documentaries of the two Delhi Durbars (1903 and 1911) and on several films made over the years by a range of filmmakers - Satyajit Ray, Sukhdev and Anand Patwardhan - are dealt with detail.

However, non-fiction alone is not given attention in the book; equally detailed is the treatment of the Indian ethos and our political history of the past 100 years. As such, we come across choice pickings of trivia throughout the book. For example, when King George was to be crowned the Emperor of India, he was delighted. The reason being the provision in the British law that forbade the crown from leaving the English shores; a new crown would cost £ 60,000 - too much for the British taxpayer. Eventually, the Indian taxpayer paid for the new crown, currently lying in the Tower Of London.

The book makes one gasp at the large number and scope of films being made in the country over the past 100 years. And it talks of several unknown films, say, Tagore's Paintings (1962), which documents the fact that the Nobel laureate took up painting in his 67th year! What's even more surprising is the information that in the next 12 years, he brushed 2,000 paintings.
If you are looking for a scholarly book on Indian documentaries, this one is definitely for you.