Skip to main content

We are currently upgrading our shopping cart; in the interim all orders are being diverted to Waterstones. If you would like to redeem a promotional code, or are an author wanting to place an order, please email us.

Contact us
Book cover for Lahore in Motion open access

Publication date: 18 February 2025

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.9781800087859

Number of pages: 248

Number of illustrations: 63

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Lahore in Motion

Infrastructure, history and belonging in urban Pakistan

Ammara Maqsood (Editor),  Chris Moffat (Editor),  Fizzah Sajjad (Editor)

Lahore in Motion provides a portrait of the Pakistani metropolis by tracing the path of the city’s first metro rail corridor. Construction for this major piece of public infrastructure began in 2015 and, over subsequent years, the nascent ‘Orange Line’ rapidly reconfigured Lahore’s urban landscape – displacing residents and slicing through existing structures along its route, all while offering Lahoris the promise of ‘world-class’ public transportation. The volume collects stories from a series of walks along the metro’s 27-kilometre path, bringing together a wide variety of authors – including academics and activists, architects and artists – to reflect on the relationship between urban change and belonging in a historic city.

Each chapter is organised around a particular station on the metro, but the volume moves far beyond the neighbourhoods shadowed by the train’s elevated track. Contributors navigate the friction generated by the Orange Line’s construction and reflect on how this project of connection both responds to and produces fragmentation in the urban environment. The book brings together critical insights on the politics of infrastructure in South Asia and the desires and dispossessions fuelling projects of development in the Global South, assessing how they unevenly inflect the intimate rhythms of everyday life in one of the world’s most populous cities.

Praise for Lahore in Motion

‘This brilliant collection of essays written by a stellar bunch of academics and practitioners is a critical addition to the expanding knowledge frontier on infrastructure and cities in Pakistan. Anchored in the mega-infrastructure project the Orange Line, the stories unfold at multiple scales and bring to life the contradictory effects of infrastructure’s longstanding promise of a better urban future.’
Nausheen Anwar, author of Infrastructure Redux: Crisis, Progress in Industrial Pakistan and Beyond

‘A lovely, mind-boggling tapestry of a book. Lahore in Motion gives us sharp, short glimpses into how Lahore lives, dies, plays, goes to work, prays, celebrates, resists and surrenders. Intimate forays into how a city reinvents itself, struggles to breathe and remembers that other imagined Lahore of legends.’
Mohammed Hanif, author of Rebel English Academy

‘Unfolding the personal and neighbourhood frictions lived along the Orange Line, a sensitive, accessible and scholarly portrait of contemporary city life emerges in these pages as a choir of discordant voices ruminate on the practical and symbolic logics of urban infrastructure.’
Caroline Knowles, author of Serious Money: Walking Plutocratic London

‘A compelling journey with electric insights about Lahore’s old and new geographies one metro station at a time. Each author provides an intricate and personal gateway into the city to muse and reflect on how people live, aspire and remember.’
Rashmi Sadana, author of The Moving City: Scenes from the Delhi Metro and the Social Life of Infrastructure

List of figures
List of contributors
Acknowledgements and note on transliteration

Introduction: Walking the Orange Line
Ammara Maqsood, Chris Moffat and Fizzah Sajjad

1 Dera Gujran
Chris Moffat

2 Islam Bagh
Shandana Waheed

3 Salamatpura
Anushay Malik

4 Mehmood Booti
Ammar Ali Jan

5 Pakistan Mint
Faizan Ahmad

6 Shalamar Bagh
Sajjad Kausar

7 Baghbanpura
Fizzah Sajjad

8 UET
Shakeel Ahmed

9 Sultanpura
Dawar H Butt

10 Lahore Railway
Fatima Tassadiq

11 Lakshmi Chowk
Amen Jaffer

12 GPO
Hala Bashir Malik

13 Anarkali-Lake Road
Shafaq Sohail

14 Chauburji
Umber bin Ibad

15 Gulshan-e-Ravi
Ammara Maqsood

16 Samanabad
Azka Shoaib

17 Bund Road
Mishele Ijaz

18 Salahuddin Road
Timothy PA Cooper

19 Khatam-e-Nabbuwat/Shahnoor
Ali Raza

20 Sabzazar
Umair Javed

21 Awan Town
Nida Kirmani

22 Wahdat Road
Fahd Ali

23 Hanjarwal
Tahir Kamran

24 Canal View
Bibi Hajra

25 Thokar Niaz Baig
Ali Usman Qasmi

26 Ali Town
Mina Malik

Afterword
Manan Ahmed Asif

Index

DOI: 10.14324/111.9781800087859

Number of pages: 248

Number of illustrations: 63

Publication date: 18 February 2025

PDF ISBN: 9781800087859

EPUB ISBN: 9781800087866

Hardback ISBN: 9781800087835

Paperback ISBN: 9781800087842

Ammara Maqsood (Editor)

Ammara Maqsood is Associate Professor in Social Anthropology at UCL.

Chris Moffat (Editor)

Chris Moffat is Senior Lecturer in South Asian History at Queen Mary University of London.

Fizzah Sajjad (Editor)

Fizzah Sajjad is an urban planner and geographer with research positions at the London School of Economics and the Lahore University of Management Sciences.

‘This brilliant collection of essays written by a stellar bunch of academics and practitioners is a critical addition to the expanding knowledge frontier on infrastructure and cities in Pakistan. Anchored in the mega-infrastructure project the Orange Line, the stories unfold at multiple scales and bring to life the contradictory effects of infrastructure’s longstanding promise of a better urban future.’
Nausheen Anwar, author of Infrastructure Redux: Crisis, Progress in Industrial Pakistan and Beyond

‘A lovely, mind-boggling tapestry of a book. Lahore in Motion gives us sharp, short glimpses into how Lahore lives, dies, plays, goes to work, prays, celebrates, resists and surrenders. Intimate forays into how a city reinvents itself, struggles to breathe and remembers that other imagined Lahore of legends.’
Mohammed Hanif, author of Rebel English Academy

‘Unfolding the personal and neighbourhood frictions lived along the Orange Line, a sensitive, accessible and scholarly portrait of contemporary city life emerges in these pages as a choir of discordant voices ruminate on the practical and symbolic logics of urban infrastructure.’
Caroline Knowles, author of Serious Money: Walking Plutocratic London

‘A compelling journey with electric insights about Lahore’s old and new geographies one metro station at a time. Each author provides an intricate and personal gateway into the city to muse and reflect on how people live, aspire and remember.’
Rashmi Sadana, author of The Moving City: Scenes from the Delhi Metro and the Social Life of Infrastructure

Related titles

Sign up to our newsletter

Don't miss out!
Subscribe to the UCL Press newsletter for the latest open access books,
journal CfPs, news and views from our authors and much more!