Chandigarh, May 13 -- At an evening of nostalgia in the Chandigarh Modern Art Gallery on Tuesday, city architects and administrators looked back at the unbuilt Chandigarh as envisaged by Polish architect Maciej Nowicki, the first architect appointed to create a city of then Prime Minister Nehru's dreams to compensate Punjabis displaced by the loss of Lahore. Speaking on the occasion, one of the senior most architects of the city, SD Sharma, who is the only surviving architect to have worked with Nowicki, said, "The city would have been different if Nowicki had not died in an air crash in 1950. He was replaced by Le Corbusier." He added that the vision of the two great architects was different in many things, as was bound to be. Nowicki dreamt of a city of humanistic modernity. Speakers said the exhibition was not comparing the two architects but musing over what could have been and what is. The event featured an exhibition of Nowicki's original designs." The show was inaugurated by H Rajesh Prasad, chief secretary of Chandigarh, in the presence of Pitor Antony Switalski, head of Mission, Embassy of the Republic of Poland, in New Delhi. Officials of the city and the head of the Polish mission said the two countries would collaborate further in future to further promote the city's heritage. A trailer was also launched on the occasion of an upcoming documentary on Nowicki's original version by Suraj Kumar of what we know as the City Beautiful. The film is directed by Suraj Kumar who has directed several other heritage films. The grand cultural show of the evening was by well-known Polish musician Michal Rudas, who trained in Indian classical music at Varanasi. He won the hearts of the audience by singing a version of Damadam Mast Kalandar in Punjabi along with Polish and Hindi songs....