Aerial view of Lahore Fort, Pakistan.

AKDN

In 2007

The Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC), through its local entity Aga Khan Cultural Service-Pakistan (AKCS-P), entered a Public Private Partnership (PPP) with the Punjab Government and the World Bank. The goal: contribute to the preservation of the Walled City of Lahore's Mughal monuments and support socioeconomic development in the surrounding low-income areas.

During the initial period, AKTC elaborated a Preliminary Strategic Framework for the urban regeneration of the Walled City and actively lobbied the Government of Punjab for the creation of a local body to take administrative responsibility for the historic sites. In 2012, the Walled City of Lahore Authority (WCLA) was created and has since been an instrumental partner in developing technical capacity and ensuring local ownership – a precondition for the long-term sustainability of these cultural treasures.

Conservation and restoration of key monuments

AKTC has conducted conservation and restoration work on the Fort's Picture Wall, the Summer Palace, Royal Kitchen, Shah Burj, Shahi Hammam and Wazir Khan Mosque.

These efforts have been based on the most advanced conservation principles and technologies, while also responding to local needs and expectations. Key elements of the Trust’s methodology have included: preliminary documentation, studies and surveys; archival research; use of traditional construction methods combined with modern conservation techniques where required; minimal intervention and respect for the aesthetic and physical integrity of the historical fabric; reversibility and compatibility of conservation measures; training of skilled professionals and craftsmen; pilot projects and sample prototypes; detailed project documentation and archiving.

Priorities were organised at three levels, beginning with the most urgent. To start with, emergency stabilisation measures: unsafe or unstable buildings that posed risk to the security of visitors and the integrity of the structures. Next, measures such as rainwater management and the establishment of proper drainage to eliminate the most acute cause of deterioration. Third, interior and decorative finishing. The last step has been “site presentation”: re-establishing missing components and details that have been lost or modified so as to attain as much of the Fort’s original configuration as possible.