The Landour area is the oldest settlement in the entire township and still preserves the tranquility of the bygone colonial times. The uphill walk towards Landour begins from the eastern end of the Mall road. The Clock Tower is the point from where the Landour Bazaar exceeds till the Gurudwara Chowk. During the British times the same stretch was known as Parade Lane as the British Army troops marched on it. Later a small business hub evolved here which was named as Shivaji Market. The former Clock Tower had a history of its own the gong of which was audible till Rajpur as claim some elders. The Castle Hill is the estate where Maharani Jinda Kaur of Patiala was kept in exile. Now the estate belongs to the Survey of India. The numerous South Indian cuisines joints opposite to the Castle Hill gate are favorite hang outs amongst youngsters of the town who frequent there for mouth watering Dosa and Idli. | |
Another land mark in the Landour Bazaar is the Kohinoor Building which has completed more than hundred years of existence. The Survey Chowk is named so after the Survey field which venues numerous sports and cultural activities of the town. The Survey Chowk is lined with shops famous for delicious sweets and Namkeens. The Landour Bazaar is also famous for a number of shops where exclusive Pahaari silver jewelry is made to order. The Survey Chowk leads through Gurudwara Chowk from where an uphill climb provids birds' eye view of the Landour settlement. This narrow alley is lined with small shops of customized handmade leather footwear, antiques and Bhotia eateries and Woolens. The climb culminates at Mullingaar, the first residential building of Mussoorie, thus giving the locality its name after it. Mullingaar is the only Bhotia habitation in the town and the Bhotia elders can be seen playing cards or just basking cozy sun in the wind shelters of slumbering Mullingaar. The route is also frequented by many fair skinned ones as the Woodstock International School and the Language school is the prime nucleus of their settlements. The Mullingaar square is the bifurcation point for the road going to Dhanaulty and the one going further to Chaar-Dukan, Laal Tibba and Sister Bazaar. The tranquil walk towards Chaar-Dukan is thickly dense with oak and rhododendron the very air of which is quite soothing. Reasonably, the area comes under the Landour Cantonment Board and the residents include Padamshree Ruskin Bond, Padamshree Tom Alter, Steve Alter, Victor Banerjee, Pronoy Roy, Vishal Bhardwaj, Sachin Tendulkar, Sanjay Narang and Tenzin Nyima of the Bollywood thriller Kaminey fame. Doma's Inn is the Bifurcation point for one path leading through thick oak while the other through scented pine forest only to unite at Chaar-Dukan. Chaar-dukan is named so after the four (Chaar) shops (Dukan) which stands next to the St. Pauls' or the Kellogs' Church where the parents of legendary Sir Jim Corbett entered into holy matrimony. Chaar-Dukan is a really laidback joint where the USP is hot and tempting cheese omelets, pizzas, pastas and macaronis, noodles, pancakes and juices and aromatic tea and coffee, all under the lazy lukewarm sun and naughty crispy breeze. |
Sunday, 5 August 2012
LANDOUR BAZAAR
KASHMIR CORNER

KULRI BAZAAR
Stretching from the State Bank of India through the erstwhile Picture palace, Kulri bazaar is the biggest and the most happening hub in the town with international brands showrooms and pizza and coffee joints lined up next to each other yet amidst some structures of the British times. The State Bank building itself is an impressive colonial architectural marvel which used to be the Himalayan Hotel that had hosted prominent personalities of the bygone times such as Frederick 'Pahari' Wilson and Sir John Lang. The exchange building is another such masterpiece where a printing press published journals of those times. The Cambridge Book Depot is where Padamshree Ruskin Bond visits every Saturday evening to interact with his fans and admirers. Surrounded by the numerous international coffee and pizza joints stand two restaurants managed by local Tibetan families serving authentic delicious Tibetan, Chinese and Thai cuisines. | |
Other magnets in the Kulri bazaar includes antiques and souvenir shops, drapers, Kashmiri garment showrooms, international fashion and sports brands showrooms, tattoo, body piercing studios and cyber cafes, chocolate-muffin-softies-brownies cafes, coffee-south Indian Cuisine, paani puri-tikki chat outlets, delicious hams and sausages, mouth watering non-vegetarian tandoory and rolls, two liquor and wine vends and two bars out of which one is famous for its tempting sizzlers and live music. The night in Kulri Bazaar is not complete without the choice of cigar, aromatic paan or hot gulab jamun or cold ras malai which can be savoured at the square where one path leads to The Rink. The Rink was and still is one of the most peculiar wooden floors roller skating Rinks in the entire country. The fever of skating in India got ignited from the Rink only which used to be the biggest skating Rink of those times. The Rink hosted the venue of numerous national and international skating championship both pre and post Independence. The Picture Palace, which was called the Electric Picture Palace pre-Independence, was the first ever Picture there of the country which was run with electricity. The theatres were usually run with petromax those days. Just beneath the Picture Palace was the Jubilee Cinema and together both the theatres were the crowd puller during the 1970s and 1980s. Another theatre, La-Anjuman, stood right next to the Roxy building near The Rink. The route which leads through Picture palace till Landour bazaar is lined with shops belonging to the Bhotia community of Mussoorie who sell woollens, garments and silver jewellery. |
JHULAGHAR MARKET
As the name rightly suggests, Jhulaghar is the centre for fun and merry with a manually operated giant wheel and the cable car as the prime attraction. The acrobatic stunts performed by young lads spinning the giant wheel are awe inspiring. Jhulaghar is the true Chaupati of Mussoorie where tongue tingling Bhel-puri , sev-puri, tikki-chat, idli-dosa, chhole-bhature, rajma-chawal, kadi-chawal and coffee-cold drinks can be savoured. Jhulaghar is the terminal point, underneath the gorgeous Weeping Willow tree, for the cycle rickshaw coming from the Library bazaar. A bifurcation of roads leads through the upper and lower slopes of the ridge only to unite again near the State Bank of India. The lower slope is lined with stalls selling eatables and garments, the cable car station, the tourist information office, ready to order school uniform shops, railway out agency and general merchants. | |
The Allahabad bank premise on the lower slope is gardened with exotic flowering plants including the fragrant Magnolia. The upper catchment of Jhulaghar is flanked with shops of woollens, woodwork, antiques, tours and travel services, temptingly large samosa and gulab jamun, video games and a multi-racial version of the Tibetan market. The telephone exchange and the century old Grand Post Office demark the Jhulaghar market. Sadly though, the Jhulaghar hub has witnessed the mass killing of innocent locals by the Uttar Pradesh policemen on 2nd September 1994 during a protest for the demand of a separate Uttarakhand state. The area has been named as Shaheed Sthal (martyr ground) where a memorial stands. |
GARHWAL TERRACE LANE
A few meters ahead of the Tibetan market on the Mall Road lays the tiny market flanked with very few shops on either side of the road selling fashion garments, woollens, kashmiri garments, leather goods, paintings, pashmina, rugs and semi precious stones. The cosy little market is one preferred destination among the locals and the tourists alike for steamy coffee and Maggie, flavoured ice cream softies and authentic Tibetan and Chinese cuisines. The shop owners and the workers coexist harmoniously yet belonging to Kashmir, Garhwal, Kumoun, Jaunpur, Punjab, Gujrat, and Bihar. This beautiful stretch of the market is guarded on both ends by the Jakranda trees which bear gorgeous purple flowers during summer. The hill side of this area is a visual delight during monsoon with plenty of multicolour Daheliya flowers in bloom. The valley side on the other hand is an awe inspiring sight in itself with the glittering enormous Doon valley in the night and the phenomenal Winterline during winter. | |
The vast Garhwal Terrace, which is the Property of the Garhwal Mandal Vikas Nigam Hotel, is the vantage point for the valley sight where tourists get themselves photographed. The eastern end of the Garhwal Terrace lane leads to a cluster of a few more shops and a revolving restaurant. Further ahead are the judiciary and the Police Station which are located next to the aquariums where both fresh water and marine fishes are the attraction. The historical Hakman's Hotel opposite the aquariums has witnessed grand Ball and Cabaret evenings of the colonial times. The same point leads to the Gun Hill and the walk for Avalon top through the Christ Church. |
TIBETAN MARKET
After the Chinese occupation of Tibet in the year 1959, the Tibetans migrated to the hills of north India. His Holiness the Dalai Lama along with a number of his natives was received at the Monastery at the Katesar Castle premises who later got settled in the Happy Valley area. The Central government of India opened a school in Happy Valley itself for the children of the Tibetan folks. Gradually the Tibetan Homes Foundation was established and the Tibetan Homes School was also founded nearby. Most of the Tibetans are business people ever since the Silk route trade times. To date the Tibetan business community excel as woollen and hosiery marketers an | |
The Tibetan market is one sure place for good bargain where the jolly natured Tibetans can be seen sipping tea or munching delicious Samosa and momos which are supplied by special Tibetan market vendors. A quick bite while strolling in the market would be an experience. |
Saturday, 5 May 2012
Library bazaar, Mussoorie
![]() |
Library Bazaar, Mussoorie |
Library bazaar is one of the prime bus and taxi terminal points to enter the township of Mussoorie. Library bazaar, locally known as Kitaab Ghar, is called so after the 1843 established library which happens to be the hub of the area. The architectural magnificence library building is one fine and well standing reminder of the colonial times when the building housed the famous Savoy Bakery on the ground floor and one of the first few libraries of the country above it. The world famous Savoy Hotel, which earlier served as the Maddock School, was the prime nucleus of the vicinity. The Criterion building next to the library housed the famous Criterion bar the square in front of which has witnessed the romance and gaiety of the British era. The band stand opposite to these buildings hosted a live band which ensured some memorable evenings in the Queen of the Hills. | |
Later the band stand canopy was shifted to the Camel's Back Road and a new one was erected which was donated by the Maharaja of Kapurthala whose impressive chateau stands on the ridge above the Savoy Hotel. Another historical wonder at the Library square is the iron pole which fetched electricity from the second earliest hydroelectricity unit (Galogi Power House on the Bhatta Fall stream) in the entire country, precisely on 24 may 1905. After independence, the Library square was renamed Gandhi Chowk with a giant gate Gandhi Dwar as its entrance. The square is the junction for the roads leading to the Vincent Hill, to Company Gardens and Kempty Falls and to the Mall Road. The historical Library Still exists and caters to members only while the ground alley is lined up with grocery and general stores, toiletries and cosmetic boutiques, hosiery outlets and some tingling bakery vends. The extension of the Library market leads inside the Mall Road through the erstwhile Vasu theatre and roping in general merchants, coffee and sandwich joints, hotels and restaurants and the much sought after tempting chai-samosa and aromatic milk-jalebi sweet shops. The approximate 500 meters vicinity of the Library bazaar is harmoniously guarded on four corners by the Laxmi Narayan temple, Masjid Amania, Gurudwara Singh Sabha and the Christ Church which happens to be one of the oldest of churches of north India. The eastern end of the Library bazaar leads through the entrance of the Camel's back road which is one secluded route for leisure walks and horse rides on the north face of the Mussoorie ridge that provides a commanding view of the greater Himalayan range and the mystic Jaunpur valley. The historical canopy on the Camel's Back Road is an ideal vantage point which enables a vast panorama of tiny hamlets of Jaunpur dissected by the calmly flowing Aglaar River. The cozy canteen of the Bhardwajs at the canopy ensures a tempting yet lazy hangout right from the lively sunrise through the romantic sunset sights. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)