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Chandigarh Tourism

Chandigarh is the twin capital of the northern states of Punjab and Haryana.
However, it belongs to neither state. It is a union territory and is directly
under the administration of the Indian government. It is one of the youngest
cities in India and the main languages spoken are Hindi and Punjabi. The
town derives its name from Goddess Chandi Devi whose temple stands 15-km
form Chandigarh.
One of the few modern planned cities in India, Chandigarh is divided into
47 self-contained sectors. Architects Albert Mayer and Mathew Novicki drew
the initial plans in New York. When the latter died in an air crash in 1950,
the work was entrusted to Le Corbusier, a well-known architect and planner
and Chandigarh is now known as the city designed by him.
One can see architectural genius in the neat geometrical design of residential
quarters, reinforced concrete structures and self-contained area layouts.
Each sector of the city is designed with its own shops, academic, and health
care buildings, places of worship, open spaces, greenery and the residential
areas. Chandigarh also serves as a convenient base for those seeking to
travel to the Northern Indian Hill stations of Shimla, Kullu-Manali, Dharamsala
etc and serves as a gateway to the state of Punjab.
Places of Interest
Nek Chands Rock Garden
This Rock Garden is probably Chandigarhs premier attraction, a popular
spot for tourists. It was created by Nek Chand Saini, a resident of the
city, in 1958. He used discarded objects of everyday use like bottles, tin
cans, broken plugs, plates, saucers and rocks from the nearby Shivalik mountains
to create a 40-acre fantasy labyrinth garden with arched walkways, streams,
bridges, grottos, battlements, turrets and sculptures of people and animals.
Highlights include armies of stone ducks, papier-mache soldiers, pig iron
dancers and goblins.
Sukhna lake 
Also in Sector 1, the Sukhna Lake is an artificial reservoir. The Sukhna
Lake was created in 1958 by damming the Sukhna Choe, a seasonal stream that
flows down from the Shivaliks. Storks and cranes make migratory stops at
the lake. The lake, incidentally, has Asias longest water channel
for rowing and yachting.
Capital Complex
This area, with its monumental public buildings is the site of architect
Le Corbusiers most ambitious experiments. The concrete campus and
its accompanying lawns are meant to express the strength and unity of independent
India. They are also Le Corbusiers way of staging the functions of
government in symbolic and geometric relation to one another and to the
rest of the city. For tourists, the High Court and the Open Hand Monument
are more accessible than the Legislative Assembly and the Secretariat.
International Dolls Museum
Situated in Bal Bhawan, Sector 23, the international dolls museum contains
more than 300 dolls from nearly every country in the world. Ten ceramic
murals and a large model train complete the display.
Rock Garden
No description of Chandigarh city can be complete without a mention of its
most celebrated creations-the Rock Garden. Spread over 12 acres of wooded
land near the Capitol Complex the Rock Garden of Chandigarh is the creation
of a humble road inspector called Nek Chand. The urban waste material turned
into creative patterns and textures, mute rocks turned into art objects
attract tourists to Chandigarh. A visit to the Rock Garden is a must for
all the tourists traveling to Chandigarh.