Mohenjo Daro and Ancient cities of the Indus valley and India

Wednesday 25 June 2025 - 13:00
Online

Free

Vinita Dhume, Savills

Chaired by Meenakshi Bhagat, IUDI 

20th May, 12.00-13.00 BST    4:30-5.30 IST. 

How studying ancient cities can help us to understand the cities of today

India and Pakistan provide the location of some the world's first cities.  By studying them we can gain insight into the social, political, economic and environmental factors that influence the design, success, and fate of cities not just then, but today. 

The Indus Civilization's cities were large and well-planned, showcasing advanced Bronze Age technology and impressive architecture .  Mohenjo-daro, meaning "Mound of the Dead," was one of the largest and most advanced cities, flourishing around 2500-1900 BCE in present-day Sindh, Pakistan.

It has a grid-like layout with wide, straight streets, buildings made with bricks of a standard size, and an intricate drainage and sanitation system that included individual household toilets and public baths including the "Great Bath", "earliest public water tank of the ancient world".  The city had multi-story houses, some of which had bathrooms, and "wind-catchers" to provide cooling. The city lacked grand palaces or tombs or obvious signs of a ruling elite, suggesting that society was relatively egalitarian.

Despite its impressive infrastructure and long period of prosperity, Mohenjo-daro's decline and eventual abandonment remain a subject of debate, with theories ranging from environmental changes to invasions.  Its well-preserved ruins offer invaluable insights into the advanced civilization that once thrived in the Indus Valley.

Mohenjo-daro was abandoned around 1900 BCE - around 4000 years ago. The reasons for its decline are still debated by scholars.  Reasons suggested include:

  • environmental changes (shift in the course of the river Indus, rainfall decline).
  • social and political factors (invasions, internal strife).

There is no conclusive evidence to support any single theory.  The true cause of Mohenjo-daro's abandonment remains a major unsolved mystery of ancient history.  

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Vinita Dhume is Director, Urban Design & Placemaking, Head of London Studio, Savills Urban Design Studio.  Her work includes both the public and private sector projects, specialising in regeneration and housing renewal, masterplanning, placemaking and community engagement.

She has 25+ years of experience in masterplanning and architecture, and brings a broad breadth of knowledge on urban regeneration. She places a particular emphasis on a people-centred approach to co-creating places which are liveable and inclusive. She has led complex regeneration projects as part of larger interdisciplinary teams, working jointly to create innovative solutions to challenging problems, drawing critical insights from urban research into community engagement, design guidance (codes) and design methodologies.

Vinita has contributed to green belt research and analysis in partnership with the London School of Economics (LSE). She is a member of many Design Review Panels in London and the wider South-East, Chair of Tower Hamlets Quality Review Panel and Co-Chair of Westminster Design Review Panel.