By PETER ODUOR
Posted Thursday, May 2 2013
Posted Thursday, May 2 2013
In Summary
- My early childhood rotated around the rich farmlands of my neighbourhood, which partly explains why, growing up, I thought an engineer is a person who drives a train.
- Since then, the past 45 years have seen the skyline of Nairobi transform from diminutive, nondescript structures into spectacular architectural marvels that belong on postcards.
- When I sit on my balcony in Westlands, looking at the swing which my daughters — both now married and living in the US — played on and the trophies that they collected as they pursued their academic endeavours, I am filled with joy and happiness that my life, however much it began in a cold and uncertain way, has turned out the way it has.
Hello, my name is Engineer Ishwarlal Becharbhai
Patel, but most people simply call me IB Patel. What you are about to
read is just a few of the lessons I have learnt in life.
I tell this story because I feel that it would be
unjust not to pass along the wisdom I have gathered in the 80 years I
have walked on this planet. I hope you will pick up one or two things
along the way, bits and pieces that will either inspire you or change
your life for the better.
In 1931, as architects, constructors, designers,
and engineers were putting the final touches to the Empire State
Building in New York, I was born to a farmhand and kiosk vendor in
Kikuyu.
My early childhood rotated around the rich
farmlands of my neighbourhood, which partly explains why, growing up, I
thought an engineer is a person who drives a train.
As part of an Indian family that was barely making
ends meet, the language I first learnt to speak coherently was Kikuyu
so that I could interact with the children who lived on the farm that
belonged to the famous Chief Koinange, father of former Attorney-General
Charles Njonjo.
The Empire State Building, at 102 floors, was the
tallest skyscraper in the world when I was born and it stayed that way
for the next 40 years. Kenya, however, attempted its own small feats in
the building industry and 37 years after the completion of the Empire
State Building, Nairobi put up its first megastructure, the
International Life House on Mama Ngina Street.
That building scored a first in many ways. It was
the first attempt at a high-rise structure in Kenya. It was the first
building in the country with two basements. It was the first fully
air-conditioned building in the country. And, lastly, it was my first
major job as an architectural engineer.
That was in 1968. When the established engineers
in the country, mainly white, heard that I was the man behind the job,
they could not believe it. “We hear the small Indian man has landed a
big job,” they muttered within the industry. Yes, the small man had
finally “arrived”.
International Life House launched my career as a
consultant engineer. And, not to be vain or chest-thump — I have no
chest to thump anyway — that was also the beginning of highrise
structures in Kenya.
Since then, the past 45 years have seen the
skyline of Nairobi transform from diminutive, nondescript structures
into spectacular architectural marvels that belong on postcards.
Today, Kenya is home to some of the greatest, most
magnificent property landmarks in Africa and, looking back today, all I
can say is that I am happy to have been part of the team that crafted
the city’s skyline over the years.
And it was not just Nairobi. Whenever I make a new
acquaintance, I like asking them which part of Kenya they come from,
first, because I find that an easy ice breaker and, second, because I
like testing the waters to see whether I have extended my architectural
arms wide enough.
And I think I have. Sample these: Kijabe (Rift
Valley Academy), Njoro (Egerton University), Mbita (ICIPE Mbita Point),
Bungoma (grain silos), Homa Bay (sisal factory), Sagana (Sagana Lodge
extension), and Kisumu (CDC facilities). I have also left a few
footprints in Tanzania, Malawi, and Somalia.
Get up, do something
Many have asked what inspires me, what gets me
going. My simple answer is that analyses and theories need to be turned
into action if we are to make any progress. Dreaming and talking about
issues is not enough. You need to get up and start doing something.
I also like to create things, a drive that perhaps
comes from my childhood and an early introduction to innovation and
creativity.
Some people think I have had it easy, that
probably I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth. But they are wrong,
and this is why: During the early 1930s, many social amenities,
including schools, were racially segregated.
The good ones belonged to the whites and Indians
were looked down upon just as much as Africans — though probably a
little less. Coupled with the fact that my parents earned little, going
to school for me and my sister would have probably been impossible were
it not for an unfortunate incident that forced our family out of Kikuyu.
Bang in the middle of one cold night, local criminals, high on
the notion that all Indians were wealthy merchants, broke into our house
and demanded money.
Our parents had very little, but the robbers would
not let them off easily. They did not know that my father husked wheat
grains to survive, and so they beat him to a pulp before walking away
with what they had collected. Soon after this, we moved to Nairobi,
almost penniless, but determined to get off the farm that had now become
unsafe for us.
Graduated top of the class
That relocation marked the beginning of my
education. I joined a primary school near OTC and went on to Government
Indian High School — later renamed Jamhuri High School — where I
graduated top of the class.
It is hard to talk about one’s academic
achievements without sounding bigoted and conceited, but allow me to go
on because my performance in school was the main reason I became an
engineer.
My teenage years were a little different from that
of other children. When I finished top in my high school, the next
thing to do was go to India, since it was the cheapest, for further
studies, but there was the little problem of funds and how I would
subsist there. I solicited money from those who had faith in my academic
ability and, at the age of 16, boarded a ship to India.
Even as we sailed off, I knew well that the next
time I would be home would be after five years, yet the money in my
pocket could only see me through half of my first year in college.
Still, I went and thriftily survived through my first year on a strict
budget.
At year-end, I was placed in the top two
positions, a feat which earned me a scholarship for the remaining four
years. You can call that luck, because I have never known what to call
it.
I arrived back in Kenya in 1954 and, in the next
five years, worked at the R A Sutcliff Engineering firm, got married to
my wife Kamla Ben, and earned Sh600 a month.
In 1959, I got a Fulbright scholarship and off I went to America, followed by my wife after a few months.
America was a revelation. The buildings were
imposing and, from their magnificence, I could tell that the engineers
had done a great deal of work on them. Somehow, it was in America that
my skill and love for skyscrapers was harnessed.
The small Indian man
After graduation, I worked in the US for three
years before coming back to Kenya, then heading off to India again. I
did not stay in India for long and, in 1967, came back to the country
and established a base. I was still referred to as “the small Indian
man”. Then in 1968 came the first major job I did on my own; the
International Life House.
Among my most technically complicated projects,
Lonrho House takes the cake. When I got the deal to do the house, there
was a two-storey structure on site which had existing tenants who were
not expected to move out of their premises or close shop. We had to
construct the house around and over them as they went on with their
daily duties.
It is worth mentioning that of all the jobs I have
done, I have never gone out to seek any. Never. They come to me. And if
they do not — and there are many that do not — I never feel bad about
it because I know there are only two possibilities that could have led
to that end; either they had a better engineer or they had other ideas.
When you do a good job, people will always come to
you. And they have for me. If you look out of any office window within
the city, there is an eight-out-of-10 chance that the building you will
be looking at was done by my engineering consultancy firm.
Through all this, my policy on professionalism has remained one; be creative, do a good job, and work on your own terms.
Someone might wonder if I should not retire, now
that I am aged 80 heading to 81. The answer is an emphatic No. I still
get up to work every day and will not retire any time soon.
When I sit on my balcony in Westlands, looking at the swing
which my daughters — both now married and living in the US — played on
and the trophies that they collected as they pursued their academic
endeavours, I am filled with joy and happiness that my life, however
much it began in a cold and uncertain way, has turned out the way it
has.
For whatever price, I cannot change a thing about it.
Yes, my name is IB Patel. I am an engineer and
this is neither the whole nor the least of what my 80 years on Earth
have summed up to.
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