New Delhi:After 'Waste to Wonder' Park, people in Delhi will soon be able to witness replicas of famous Indian monuments such as Konark Temple, Mysore Palace, Charminar and Victoria Memorial Hall, fashioned out of metallic waste and scrap material.
Union minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Friday laid the foundation stone for the 'Bharat Darshan Park' in Punjabi Bagh, which will host the replicas of various prominent cultural landmarks from across the country.
The theme of the mega-park would be 'Unity in Diversity', officials said.
SDMC Commissioner Gyanesh Bharti said the park will be developed on a six-acre plot and will host replicas of Charminar, Gateway of India, Konark Temple, Nalanda ruins, Mysore Palace, Golden Temple, Meenakshi Temple, Hawa Mahal, Hampi ruins, Victoria Memorial, Sanchi Stupa, Gol Gumbaz, Ajanta Ellora Caves and Junagarh Fort, among other sites.
Through this project, the SDMC seeks to widen its ambit of 'waste-to-wealth' concept as epitomised in its 'Waste to Wonder Park' in Sarai Kale Khan.
The entire project is estimated to cost around Rs 18-20 crore, the SDMC said.
Waste to Wonder Park has replicas of the seven wonders of the world made from metal and another industrial scrap and is a big tourist attraction in Delhi today.
"The replicas in 'Bharat Darshan Park' will be built using scrap waste such as vehicles, fans, rods, iron sheets, and nuts and bolts, gathering dust in municipal stores. The park will be eco-friendly, self-sustainable with its own solar and wind power generation," a senior SDMC official said.