Ayodhya Ram Temple – An Architectural Marvel And India’s New Landmark


Ayodhya Ram Temple - An Architectural Marvel And India's New Landmark

No iron or steel has been used in the construction of the grand Ram Temple in Ayodhya.

Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh:

A new landmark of India – both structural and spiritual – rises on Ayodhya’s horizon today as a new-age architectural marvel of elegant sandstones, diligently carved by craftspeople with dedication and devotion to Lord Ram.

The majestic Ram temple in Ayodhya is a sprawling structure, built by overcoming engineering challenges and with due sensitivity to nature.

Champat Rai, general secretary of the Sri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra, said the temple’s construction is the result of “collective wisdom” of “some of the best brains in the country”.

No iron or steel has been used in the construction of the grand structure. Stones have been sourced from Rajasthan’s Bansi Paharpur area.

Mr Rai said, “The entire temple superstructure will eventually be three storeys – G 2.” Visitors will climb 32 steps from the eastern side to reach the main temple.

The temple complex, built in the traditional Nagara style, will be 380 feet long from the east to the west, 250 feet wide and 161 feet high.

Each floor of the temple will be 20 feet high and have a total 392 pillars and 44 gates.

During the excavation work, it was found that the ground was unsuitable for laying the foundation stone, a challenge that engineers overcame by creating an “artificial foundation” over which the superstructure sits.

Images of Lord Hanuman, other deities, peacocks and flower patterns have been carved onto the stones, lending the structure a divine look.

The temple complex has been decked with flowers for the consecration ceremony.

More than 3,000 kilogrammes of flowers of over 20 varieties have been used to decorate the grand structure, Sanjay Dhawalikar, head of the floral decoration team, told Press Trust of India on Sunday.

Around the grand temple is a rectangular periphery called percota, a feature found in temples in south India, but not generally in north India, Mr Rai had earlier said.

The percota will be 14 feet wide and the periphery span 732 metres.

The temple will be nestled within the percota periphery.

Ornate statues of elephants, lions, Lord Hanuman and Garuda were installed at the main entrance leading to the temple earlier this month. These statues have also been made using sandstone brought from the Bansi Paharpur.

“An ancient Shiva temple that exists on the Kuber Tila has also been revitalised,” Mr Rai said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to visit Kuber Tila on Monday.

Mr Rai had shared the layout of the temple complex with the media in late December.

A major part of the temple compound will be a green area with hundreds of trees.

The complex itself will be “atmanirbhar (self reliant)”, Mr Rai had said, underlining features such as its own sewage and water treatment plants, a fire brigade post and a dedicated power line.

About 70 per cent of the 70-acre complex will be a green area.

“The green area includes portions which are very dense and, in some segments, even sunlight hardly filters through,” Mr Rai had said.

About 600 existing trees are preserved in the green belt.

The complex will have two sewage treatment plants, a water treatment plant and a dedicated electricity line from the power house. The fire brigade post will be able to source water from an underground reservoir.

The Supreme Court delivered a historic verdict in 2019, settling the temple-mosque dispute that dated back over a century.

The top court backed the construction of the Ram temple at the disputed site. It ruled that an alternative five-acre plot must be found for building a mosque.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *