Hawa Mahal, Monuments Tours Packages
Hawa Mahal
Built in 1799, by Maharaja Sawai Pratap Singh the 'Hawa Mahal', Palace of
the Wind, is one of the major landmarks of Jaipur. It is an integral part
of the City Palace, an extension of the Zenana standing away from the main
complex. This five storey building of unusual architecture designed by Lal
Chand Usta, is a stunning example of Rajput artistry made of red and pink
sand stone, beautifully outlined with white borders and motif's painted
with quick lime. The monument with a spectacular view of Jaipur city with
road avenues, intersections and colourful crowds in the market, was originally
conceived with the aim of enabling ladies of the royal household to watch
the everyday life and royal processions in the city without being seen by
others.
Hawa Mahal from the road side Its facade from the road side makes Hawa Mahal
look more like a delicate screen than a palace. This five-story, pyramid-shaped
structure has tier after tier of 953 small casements, each with tiny lattice
worked (Jali) pink windows, small balconies and arched roofs with hanging
cornices, exquisitely modeled and carved. These small windows circulate
cool air (Hawa) even in hot months. The pyramidal outline is even throughout
by cramming and multiplying casements; and uses repetition of motifs to
enhance its beauty.
The entrance to Hawa Mahal is from the City Palace side, through a stately
door which opens into a spacious courtyard. The courtyard has a double storeyed
building on three sides. There is a small archeological museum here. Only
the eastern wing has three more storeys above, which are just a single room
thick. The building, standing on a high podium, is a fifty-foot high thin
shield, less than a foot in thickness, with small intimate chambers , which
give this palace its unique facade. There are no regular stairs to reach
the upper floors, but only ramps.
Hawa Mahal which is currently under the supervision of the State archeological
department provides the visitor with excellent views of the city. The best
time to view Hawa Mahal is sunrise when sunlight through the latticed windows
gives it a wonderful glow.
Jantar Mantar

Across the road from the palaces is the famous JANTAR MANTAR one of the
five observatories in India . Built by Sawai Jai Singh, this is one of the
largest and the best preserved. A passionate hobby of the king in the field
of Astronomy, numerology, insighted him to execute this observatory and
with the help of skilled labourers, they managed to create a collection
of complex astronomical instruments chiselled out of stone and most of which
continues to provide accurate information to this day. The most striking
instrument is the Brihat Samrat yantra Sundial, an imposing yellow edifice
to the far right of the observatory complex which has a 27m high gnomon
arm set at an angle of 27degree.The shadow this casts moves up to 4m in
an hour, and aids in the calculation of local and meridian pass time and
various attributes of the heavenly bodies, including declination the angular
distance of a heavenly body from the celestial equator and altitude. This
highlight of the observatory has made it a centre of attraction for the
tourist visiting Jaipur
Suggested Tour Packages
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Rajasthan
Pushkar Tour (18 Days)
Delhi - Jodhpur - Luni - Dhamli - Deogarh - Narlai - Kumbalgarh -
Ranakpur - Udaipur - Dungarpur - Udaipur - Delhi |
Temples,
Desert and Beaches Tour (17 Days)
Delhi - Varanasi - Khajuraho - Orchha - Jhansi - Agra - Jaipur - Jodhpur
- Udaipur - Bombay - Goa - Bombay |
Palace
on Wheels Train Tour (08 Days)
Delhi - Jaipur - Jaisalmer - Jodhpur - Ranthambore - Udaipur - Agra
- Delhi |
North
India Holiday Packages (18 Days)
Delhi - Srinagar - Gulmarg - Kargil - Leh -Alchi - Jammu - Amritsar
- Delhi - Jaipur - Agra - Delhi |