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The palatial building built on an area of
330 acres with a private garden designed by the illustrious
Lutyens, as the official residence of the Viceroy of India
during British reign, is now the official residence of the
First Citizen of India – its President. The imposing
structure almost overshadows all other monuments within its
vicinity.
The architectural wonder is a mixture of Mughal and Western
styles. The columns at the front entrance have bells carved
into them and Lutyens designed them with the idea that since
the bells could not make sounds, the British rule would
never come to an end. Rashtrapati Bhawan is the highlight of
Lutyens New Delhi and was completed in 1929 at a cost of
12,53,000. The palace has 340 rooms.
At one time, 2,000 people were required to look after the
building and serve the Viceroy's household. It has an
impressive garden called the Mughal Gardens, which is open
to the public for a short while in February when the flowers
are in full bloom.
Once the residence of the British Viceroy in India, and now
the official residence of the president of the Indian
republic, was designed by Sir Edward Lutyens as part of the
new imperial city that marked the shift of the capital from
Calcutta where the British empire had struck root in India,
to New Delhi. This, and the rest of the new city, sported
Indo-Saracenic architecture at its grandest. |
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