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Greater Iqbal Park

Urban park in Lahore, Pakistan


Summary

Urban park in Lahore, Pakistan

FieldValue
imageThe_mighty_Minar-e-Pakistan.jpg
image_captionThe Minar-e-Pakistan, central monument of the park
nameGreater Iqbal Park
locationLahore, Punjab, Pakistan
map_captionLocation within Lahore
coordinates
typeUrban park
area328.901 acre
created
ownerParks and Horticulture Authority Lahore
open06:00 AM - 08:00 PM
publictransitAzadi Chowk Metrobus Station
websitehttps://www.pha.gop.pk/project-details-new?id=3

Greater Iqbal Park (Punjabi/), formerly Iqbal Park and Minto Park, is an urban park located on the outskirts of the Walled City in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan.

Noted as the home of Minar-e-Pakistan*,* the 329-acre park includes an artificial lake which spreads over four acres which includes an 800-feet-long musical fountain. Other attractions includes a two-kilometre-long soft rail, a library, an open-air gym and a food court. The tombs of Iqbal and Hafeez Jalandhari are also located in the park.

History

The grounds known as Greater Iqbal Park today were used for ceremonial military parades during the Mughal era. After the ascension of the Sikhs into power in 1799, the grounds came to be known as 'Parade Ground', as the area continued to be used for the same purpose as it was by the Mughals.

When the British captured Lahore in 1849, they renamed the grounds as Minto Park, after Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto, and Governor-General of India between July 1807 and 1813.

After the creation of Pakistan, the park was renamed as Iqbal Park, after the poet-philosopher Muhammad Iqbal, in commemoration of the Lahore Resolution of 1940. After extensive renovations were completed in December 2016, the park was given its current name.

Renovation and expansion

Work began on the upgradation of the park on 10 October 2015. Habib Construction Services Limited was contracted to complete the project. Along with renovation of the Minar-i-Pakistan, the project featured expansion of the Iqbal Park by including it in the stretch of Circular Road between the park and Lahore Fort. The 125-acre green oasis is surrounded almost entirely by the old city of Lahore. The project was completed on 9 November 2016 incurring a total cost of PKR 981 million as quoted by the contractor of the project.

The new-look park was formally inaugurated on 17 December 2016.

Furthermore, the National History Museum was opened in the park in 2018. It is the first digital museum in Pakistan that offers an immersive experience to visitors with the help of cutting-edge technologies. Using holograms and virtual reality equipment, this digital museum commemorates all the historic events leading to the emergence of Pakistan in 1947. Along with hosting a vast collection of national relics and antiquities, the museum also highlights the key sports and cultural events throughout the history of the country.

Features

The park features the following sites:

  • Minar-e-Pakistan
  • Tomb of Hafeez Jalandhari
  • Tomb of Allama Iqbal
  • Musical fountain
  • National History Museum
  • Library
  • Boating lake
  • Mughal-style baradari
  • Children play area
  • Food court
  • Open-air gym
  • Walking trails
  • Buggy track
  • Gazebos

Notes

References

References

  1. "TDCP Resorts & Stopovers".
  2. (12 July 2016). "Greater Iqbal Park to open for public on August 14". The Express Tribune (newspaper).
  3. "Greater Iqbal Park profile".
  4. (2016-12-17). "Nawaz inaugurates Greater Iqbal Park in Lahore, says park not for sit-ins".
  5. "Lahore".
  6. Shah, Sabir. (30 April 2018). "A history of Greater Iqbal Park".
  7. "Minto Park: Witnessing Military To Political Journeys".
  8. "DEVELOPMENT OF GREATER IQBAL LAHORE".
  9. (18 December 2016). "PM inaugurates Greater Iqbal Park in Lahore, says it's no place for sit-ins".
  10. (2019-03-23). "New museum in Lahore brings Pakistan's history to life".
  11. (22 January 2016). "New Greater Iqbal Park (Minar e Pakistan)-Pictures, Map, Facilities".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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