Connaught Place | |
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commercial, shopping | |
Panoramic view of inner circle and central park in Connaught Place
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Nickname(s): cp | |
Coordinates: 28°37′58″N 77°13′11″E / 28.63278°N 77.21972°ECoordinates: 28°37′58″N 77°13′11″E / 28.63278°N 77.21972°E | |
Country | India |
State | Delhi |
District | New Delhi |
Named for | Duke of Connaught and Strathearn |
Government | |
• Body | New Delhi Municipal Council |
Languages | |
• Official | Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, English |
Time zone | IST (UTC+5:30) |
PIN | 110001 |
Lok Sabha constituency | New Delhi |
Civic agency | New Delhi Municipal Council |
Connaught Place is one of the largest financial, commercial and business centres in New Delhi, India. It is often abbreviated as CP and houses the headquarters of several noted Indian firms. The main commercial area of the new city, New Delhi, during the erstwhile British Raj, its environs occupy a place of pride in the city and are counted among the top heritage structures in New Delhi. It was developed as a showpiece of Lutyens' Delhi with a prominent Central Business District.
Named after Prince Arthur, 1st Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, construction work began in 1929 and was completed in 1933. A metro railway station built under it is named Rajiv Chowk (after Rajiv Gandhi).
Prior to the construction of Connaught Place, the area was a ridge, covered with kikar trees and populated with jackals and wild pigs. Residents of the Kashmere Gate, Civil Lines area visited during the weekends for partridge hunting. The Hanuman Temple attracted many visitors from the old walled city, who came only on Tuesdays and Saturdays and before sunset, as the return trip was considered dangerous.
Residents of villages including Madhoganj, Jaisingh Pura and Raja ka Bazaar were evicted to clear the area for the construction of Connaught Place and the development of its nearby areas. The villages were once situated along the historic Qutb Road, the main road connecting Shahjahanabad, the walled city of Delhi (now known as Old Delhi) to Qutb Minar in south Delhi since the Mughal era. The displaced people were relocated in Karol Bagh to the west, a rocky area populated only by trees and wild bushes. However, three structures were spared demolition. These were Hanuman temple, a Jain temple in Jaisinghpura and the Jantar Mantar.