Orbit Hotel Kolkata

Conjuring Kolkata

Kolkata, the second-biggest city of India, is a festival called life. From the morsel of its germination, the city has been a shrub of emotion to celebrate the vision of human imagination. Calcutta, as the sentiment evokes – has been an idea that sheltered the engineering of the finest city in Asia, and the second city of the British Empire in the world. Blossomed in world’s largest delta, this place has been a sensation to the European seafarers to envision it as the capital of British India. As the long chain of English settlement concluded, Job Charnock evolved his imagination, with the first of those, to have the visionary transcendence of fortifying this land by the Ganges, to a modern city. In time, the then inhospitable stretch of the Ganges - locally known as River Hooghly, transformed three villages to the cultural and intellectual capital of India in perpetuity.  

The spirit of time that put Calcutta in the maps of the modern cities, still hangs in its ambience - in the most reluctant way. As you make your headway, through the subtle yet imposing streets, the dwelling witnesses of the heritage era will hug you around, from over your shoulders. Also adorned, as Tilottama by its dwellers, with all her riches and plights, she is a beauty, where beyond the images of human sufferings, the spruce Bengali aristocracy will charm your day. This city will absorb you in experiencing its mild and fruity tang of Bengali cuisines that is worth savoring in a day of potpourri. It’s a frequent grandeur, to cherish the old gentlemen’s clubs, bid in India’s largest race turf, or enjoy a siesta in India’s finest golf course.  

Calcutta is the splendid and cacophonic, and refined and desperate spirit that breathes in the blend of its heritage designs, fine living & dining, streets bubbling with life, spiritual sites of Bengali renaissance, engineering marvels from the dawn of modern time, and spurt of the new generation & infrastructure in the cradles of its colonial and traditional past. As you tread through the dusky beauty that grew from the villages of Sutanuti, Govindpore, and Kalikata, which used to stretch from the present day Coolie Bazaar, Prinsep’s Ghat on south to Jora Bagan Ghat, Chitpore towards the north, time will reveal itself in the spirit of the city that whispers its mythos of two millennia.

Lay your hands on Colonel Mark Wood’s Map of 1784 to trace the fabric of this landscape that coordinates Govindpore at the Govindpore Creek, high on the riverbank in the deep woods of Tolly’s Nullah. Otherwise revered as the Adi Ganga, this very ravine had glided down the English settlers to the places of the city, where Calcutta now stands. Before the metamorphosis in its nomenclature from Surman’s Nullah to Tolly’s Nullah, the channel suckled the city, with its holiest of holy waters as the main course of River Hooghly, flowing past by Kalighat - one of the 51 Shakti Peeethas of Hindu Pilgrimage, Baruipur – the erstwhile Atisara village, and Magra to the Bay of Bengal.

The city will take you through its beating heart of Dalhousie Square and Kumartuli of arty Bengal to the new lands of the nouveau riche Bengalis, through its cityscape by the ancient and contemporary river channels of sacred waters that have nourished Calcutta with an extra ordinary life. The swamp that was once a great wilderness, now feeds you with a bountiful of tantalizing experiences to let you hearken in the mesmerizing anticipation-in-time. Friendlier than other Indian cities, travelling in Calcutta is more than a visit. Calcutta - is an affair of the heart.

 

Heritage Buildings of Dalhousie Square – BBD Bagh       

History affirms that the marshy bayou - Sutanuti that harbored the sail of Job Charnock on 1668, had been inhabited for over 2 millennia. From Sutanuti , Gobindpore, and Kalikata, a city flourished in the grandeur of European vision - Calcutta.   Benoy, Badal and Dinesh Bag, the erstwhile Dalhousie Square - heart of the then capital of British India created a colossal spate stately of structures. Walk through the conscious influence of frenzies that engineered the heritage of Calcutta in the intermingling inlays of Neo-Gothic, Baroque, Neo-Classical, Oriental and Islamic schools of design. Surrounded by the palatial mansions, the city of palaces welcomes you to its palatial mansions, wide boulevards, English churches, and grand formal gardens, around General Post Office, Eden Gardens, High Court, Writers’ Building, Netaji Indoor, Shahid Minar, to name a few.

Howrah Bridge                

Built by Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company in 1942, Howrah Bridge is a colossal abstraction of steel cantilevers that joins the twine city – Calcutta and Howrah. As the Ganges spread her arms, flowing toward the open sea to the south, she naturally separates the cities at her breadth. The most demanding situation roused, when the mammoth railway terminal erected at the west bank of the Ganges, the Howrah Railway Station. The oldest and largest railway station complex in India, with 23-track count, till-date has the highest train-handling capacity of any railway station in India. Remained as one of the busiest railway station in terms of daily passenger volume from its inception, creates a spate of traffic movement between the two cities. Howrah Bridge, a World War II era titanic engineering marvel, rechristened as Rabindra Shetu, established the solution, and became and remained as the busiest bridge in the world. The 705m-long 8-lane Bridge shares the same size with its distance cousin, Sydney Harbour Bridge, but the later in no-match in terms of carrying teeming flow of the traffic.

Belur Math        

The seat of the wandering monk of India, Swami Vivekananda, who taught the world about universal toleration in the name of the most ancient order of monks in the world, built the International Headquarter of Ramakrishna Mission in 1899, dedicating to his Guru Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa. Belur Math harks to the universal harmony in its architectural embodiment, manifesting the structural stylistics of temple, mosque, and church. As the evening sky grows dark, amid the palms and manicured lawns, this citadel of spirit, culminates its evening rituals with a divine and soul-stirring prayer. Ramakrishna Mandir, which holds the centerpiece of the religious bearing, shares and reflects the art of a cathedral, an Indian royal palace, and Aya Sofya of Istanbul, all at once. Several smaller shrines by the banks of the endless Ganges will level your mind in the calm symbolism of reasons. Alas! You will meet the entombing of the Guru’s wife in Sri Sarada Devi Temple, where the spirit of the mother, still continues to bless you.

Dakshineswar Kali Temple         

As the Atharvaveda reckons, the land of Bangs gave birth to the mighty kingdoms of the ancient Bengal, with five language families of the world, to evolve as one of the most ethnically diverse place of the nation. Mysteries still shroud the world’s largest delta, where the philosophical reawakening of India germinated. Remnants of Prakrit abasatta civilization dating back 4000-years, trail its mystic and divine bearings in the erstwhile dwelling, Banga, otherwise known as Bengal. At the age of survival, we travel to the mystic Indian Sacré-Coeur Kali Temple of 1847, situated 20km north of the city at the banks River Ganges. Absorb the spiritual vibes of the vibrant riverside divine complex, from where Shri Ramakrishna, Swami Vivekananda’s Guru started the spiritual renaissance in Bengal. The meditative reverence of the Guru, lingers in the soul-searching philosophy, to embrace life once again. The main temple, as known as the Navaratna, overlooks the Belur Math across the Ganges. Board on the time capsule of the bygone era, to drift to the other side of the River Ganges to cherish the oblation paid by Swami Vivekananda to his Guru – the Belur Math – in traditional uncovered boats from the temple’s green canopies of riverbank. Also, visit to the temple dedicated to Rani Rashmoni, near the entrance of Dakshineshwar, whose visionary command erected the temple complex.

Maniktala Jain Temple                 

Amid the old streets of North Calcutta, teeming with life and commotion of the modern time, a set of three Jain Temples at Raja Dinendra Road in Maniktala is a visual bouquet. The best-known Sheetalnathji Temple, built in 1867 by an art enthusiast - Ray Badridas Bahadur, evokes the natural sense of art and appreciation. The dazzling, yet unrefined work of colorful parody that sets the mosaics, spires, columns, and splintered figures on the temple architecture creates the Gaudi’s art of Catalan Modernism. You can travel back to the time of Indian religious reformations, as you pave through the southern gateway arch of the Pareshnath Jain Temple Complex to visit the serine seat of Sri Sri Channa Probhuji Mandir. The composed Dadaji Jain Mandir of 1810 beckons for its central marble tomb-temple pattern, bedecked with silver studs, is a tantalizing feeling that can squat your mind amidst gardens of the temples, which isolates its majesty from the everyday Calcutta.

College Street - Boi Para & Coffee House - Albert Hall                 

Moving away from the humdrum of the MG Road, the erstwhile Harrison Road in Central Calcutta, down to Collage Street, towards Ashutosh Museum, take a block left, and reach for the fourth door on your left to get the stairway to the nostalgic cafeteria. Although, the cheap and dishwater coffee is the precious calling, but enjoying the ambient and feeling of being there is perversely fascinating. The unpretentious high-ceilinged cafeteria imbibes the spirit of the time, once, where the freedom fighters, revolutionaries, and bohemians used to gather, to exchange the harvest of the minds. The vibration of the Bengali intellectual heydays, surprisingly still exists in the Indian Coffee House, the erstwhile Albert hall, colloquially known by the Calcuttians, as Coffee House, will quench your thirst for the caffeine with a shot of Bengali intelligentsia. When you are quite done, stroll a bit, down the narrow Collage Street book market. The denizens are known for their love for books, which caption your imagination to reality, with the lively crowd of every day bookworms, spending hours bargaining for new and old books. Some of the most acclaimed educational institutions like University of Calcutta, Presidency University, Calcutta Medical College, and Sanskrit College, which bred numerous prodigies of the nation and world are sparsely located in these streets.

Shobhabazar Rajbari (Shobhabazar Royal Palace)            

Have a lavish noon in one of the most flamboyant royal palaces of the zamindar - Raja Nabakrishna Deb of the then Calcutta. The palace falls in the pioneering list of the elite houses of the North Calcutta. Once, a modest man, the raja amassed a massive wealth from the British Raj for tendering his aid to topple the Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah from his throne. The acquired wealth, eventually, let Calcutta have in her list of mansions, two more royal properties, the Choto Shobhabazar Rajbari at 33 Raja Nabakrishna Street and Baro Shobhabazar Rajbari, popularly known as the Shobhabazar Royal Palace at 33 Raja Nabakrishna Street. This splendid and colossal architecture will be a treat for your eyes, constructed as a saat-mahala house. The most intact and breather inlay of the estate is the courtyard, with thakurdalan, which still greets the goddess Durga every year, during one of the most elaborate festivals of India – the Durga Puja or Pujo, as the Bengalis beckons it throughout the world. The grandeur of the palace is centered to the saat khilan thakurdalan, bedazzled with multi-foliate arches propping pairs of squared pilasters. Between the arches, rise the Pairs of columns to support the entablature above.

Kumortuli – The home of idol makers                   

A living legacy and one of the wonders of Calcutta, still breathes at the northern part of the city. Kumortuli, also known as Kumartuli or in the archaic way, Coomartolly is the traditional potters’ quarter of Calcutta. It is the only dwelling of the clay idol makers in country, where life is infused in the idols of Hindu gods and goddesses with immaculate precession that is mesmerizingly natural in its bearings. The place is the living testimony of the virtue of artistic bend the potters are bestowed with, which transformed them from the obscurity of the folklore art to the prominence of global podium. This Calcutta neighborhood supplies the clay idols of Hindu gods and goddesses to the innumerable barowari pujas in Calcutta and other states of India, and exports an ample of those overseas. The daily activities of this area reflect the length and breadth of the Hindu festivity, which lives round the year.

Marble Palace  

An opulent mansion of 19th Century Calcutta bears the witnesses of the marching time, and spirit of an aesthetic being. Located in North Calcutta at 46, Muktaram Babu Street, the well preserved elegance will embrace you to its marble walls and floors, from which its named spring. The manor reflects a beyond the limit Bengali imagination, in the strangest manifestation of inspiration, of Raja Rajendra Mullick Bahadur, a landed gentry of Bengal. Lavishly built in Italian marble, the 1855’s palace treasures a collection of epoch, scattered in the lawn can put you in the time travel with the sculptures of lions, the Buddha, Christopher Columbus, and Jesus, the Virgin Mary, and numerous Hindu gods and goddesses. The architectural grandeur showcases the Bengali creativity in inspiring the building inlay in neoclassical style, coupled with its open courtyard, largely a traditional Bengali style that hold a thakur-dalan, for the family members to worship in the Hindu way. This three-storied building stands tall with its fluted Corinthian pillars, over which, lean the ornamented verandas with fretwork and sloping roofs, mingling in the style of a Chinese pavilion. The structure is surrounded by gardens with lawns, rock garden, a lake, and a small zoo.

Jorasanko Thakur Bari & Rabindra Bharati Museum (Tagore Museum)  

As the two (jora) wooden or bamboo bridges (sanko) spanned over a small stream at the erstwhile Mechuabazar neighborhood of North Calcutta, the city adopted the identity in activity. With the metamorphosis in name to Jorashankho, the dwelling of the Thakur family became popular as the Jorasanko Thakur Bari. It is the abode of the creator and philosopher, for whom the modern Bengal at its hiccup, harked with hope. The frequencies of the universe or will of god, whatever it may be, from Calcutta to Bengal, and India to the world, the apostles have had the philosophies to steer the humankind for a greater good. An exponent of the Bengal Renaissance, who didn’t repudiate to decline the knighthood over the stature of nation, Gurudev Rabindranath Thakur, as Anglicized to Tagore, was born and lived here. More than a house, it is a cultural symbol of India and world, which nurtured the first Non-European Nobel Laureate in Literature. The impression of which are still living as an impressive Tagore Museum and Rabindra Bharati University of fine arts, connect us to the humanists and Universalists in us, to the call of greater good and universal tolerance. Till-date, the nations of Indians and Sri Lankans revere the bearings Tagore as their anthem for the nation.

Mother House                 

A 15 minutes’ walk from Sudder Street to Alimuddin Street, and then 2 minutes to the south. It’s the second alley to the right, and you will reach the haven of the gentle soul. Mother House of the Missionaries of Charity’s welcomes a regular flow of pilgrims from varied faiths. It will heal your heart, as you will pay homage at the sober tomb of the blessed mother - Angel of Mercy. A small picturesque room, adjacent to the tomb, displays the worn sandals of mother. The battered enamel dinner bowl, kept by the sandals will humble your being. Away from the arrogant display of modern living, a room located upstairs the tomb, is the place, where she worked and slept from 1953 to 1997. The modest camp bed and an arcane airline rout-map, framed and hanging from the wall, with all-encompassing simplicity will take you back to innocence. The serenity of Mother Teresa still exists in the quietness of her soul.

Victoria memorial

The implausible Victoria Memorial is an exquisite and elaborated symphony of white marble. An incredible combination of Mughal and Italian architecture reflects the staggering diversity; India had embraced for over thousands of years. The flamboyant display of the commemoration of Queen Victoria’s 1901 diamond jubilee can juxtapose your mind at the two different hemispheres of the world. Picture the US Capitol in Washington DC, and then, travel in time to Agra in India to merge it with the beauty of Taj Mahal – Victoria will emerge in the city of Calcutta. Now, a heritage site was sprung in 1921, which 20 years to complete. Statues and busts of Kind Gorge V and Queen Mary, with other dignitaries will greet you, right from the hallway. To the left, the royal prints and paintings clad the lavish gallery in a splendid way. Through the Calcutta Gallery, the soaring Central Chamber still reflects the zenith of Britain. You will be surrounded by the carefully preserved colonial past of this enigmatic city. Nevertheless, if your soul wants to move out from the marble closet, the magnetic beauty of the memorial, amid the sprawling gardens, and water bodies reflecting the symmetrical structure of the Imperial era. By day, you can enter into this beauty through the north and south gate, with ticket booth on the sides, and to exit, you can use the east gate. As the evening descends upon the city, the dazzling sight of Sound-and-Light will astound your senses to the unexplored layers of your minds. This spectacular open-air canvas will entice you for 45-long-mintes, which starts its selling of tickets from 5pm at the east gate.

St Paul’s Cathedral         

Built on the delta of attraction, the verve the city adds on to the Angelical beauty, at its central neighborhood of heritage and culture. The divine cathedral is the Church of North India, which props the seat of the Diocese of Calcutta, and its incumbent bishop. The colossal abode of Thee, is situated favorably amidst the heritage and stately structures, and lush green meadows and gardens. The most organic area of the city is the lungs of Calcutta. Leaving Birla Planetarium on your left, as you enter a modestly fashioned entrance, the towering height of central crenellated tower of St. Paul’s will embrace you in the divinity of compassion, with quite a home in Cambridgeshire in the air. Built between 1839 and 1847, it is decorated by a remarkably wide nave. The west window is fashioned by the stained-glass window by the signature pre-Raphaelite maestro Sir Edward Burne-Jones. The pristine floral designs, with exquisite mural painting add character to the quality of the beauty that captures the beholder. As the church is closed between 3pm and 6pm, you may stroll through or spend some languid moments amid the intellectual gatherings of the city crowd. Nandan and Rabindra Sadan Theater complex, along with Academy of Fine Arts can make your day with soulful experiences. By evening, you may either head for the Light and Sound at Victoria or celestial shows in Birla Planetarium, to be in the cosmic presence, in the comfort of your chair.

Prinsep Ghat                    

Ganges, as she enters into the endless Bengal, she defines the purpose of the civilized life, in a very different way, than the west. An embodiment of the feminine spirit, as the pillars of Indian Civilization, she leans on to the eternal quest. The reflection of this nature of reality still lives by the east bank of the Ganges, where the Prinsep Ghat jetty is located beside the James Prinsep Memorial. The Palladian porch is the celebration of the Indian philosophy, embraced by the eminent orientalist James Prinsep, who went deep into the depth of the inscriptions of Ashoka, upon which the present day’s Indian constitution is drafted. Bedecked in Greek and Gothic inlays, the monument lies between the Watergate and Fort William. Since its inception by W. Fitzgerald in 1843, it had been the royal jetty of the British entourages. History reveals that it is the oldest recreation spot of the city, since the days of Raj. Evening is the special time; when the place revives to bustling life, with food-stalls and other roadside item to prop up your mental remain – away from the maddening crowd of the vigorous city. But, throughout the day, the most unique thing that you can enjoy, in the age digital arrogance, is the quiet and isolated traditional boat ride (optional), with the setting Sun at Princep Ghat.

Birla Mandir      

Present day Calcutta, a city of extreme like no other, with staggering diversity in culture, religion, spirituality, and philosophy I in a dazzling kaleidoscope of human existence. With much of its metamorphosis happened in her social fabric, its aesthetic emotions have also been manifested on the shifting art of the monumental legacy. One of the most striking evidence stands on Asutosh Chowdhury Avenue in Ballygunge, a Hindu Temple, known as Birla Mandir. This generously spread 20th Century temple complex, holds the magnetic view of the Laxmi Narayan Temple, propped up by cream-colored sandstone, with its corncob fashioned towers, attracting many souls in the horizon. More than size, the shape of the towers showcases the most ingenious spirit of the modern day temple building. As built by the industrialist Birla family, the temple adopted the family name, instead of the spiritual characters dwelling in. As you approach its marble staircases, the abode of humankind will greet you in the morning from 5.30am to 11am and in the evening from 4 .30pm to 9pm, with its three shikhars or domes. Here Krishna and Radha resides in the main temple, goddess Durga – the embodiment of shakti at the left temple, and the ancestor of all Yogis, the most ancient spiritual character –Shiva himself. The temple bears a close resemblance to the Lingaraj Temple of Bhubaneswar. The remarkable application of the narration styles of the ancient temple builders are captured by the architect Nomi Bose on the temple walls, through the pictorial story telling of the Bhagavad Gita.

Lunch Cruise                     

As the holiest of holy water channel travels from the mighty Himalayas to the endless Bengal to mingle into the sea at the world’s largest delta, it gives a splendid opportunity to make your day worth remembering. How about having your lunch – cruising down the Ganges? While you will enjoy your finest gourmet, the river cruiser will set sail from Millennium Park for Botanical Garden. After a filling lunch, enjoy a laid-back noon in Botanic Garden, away from the harshness of the city life. It’s a escape in the city, there the famous Great Banyan – approximately 1250 years old, with a 330 meters long road around its circumference. Lose yourself, and enjoy in the rich flora of the nature in bounty. Explore sit-back, and relax in the tranquility.

Evening Cruise 

After all the triumphs and debacles, as the Sun beats the retreat to the mighty Ganges, sit back and realize your search of self-in-travel under the rust evening sky, with mild breezing, and lit up twin cities at the both banks of the holy waters. Amidst the bustling cities, gently sail up-stream to anchor at the feet of the philosopher and apostle of the creator of divine generation of our time, the revered seat of Sri Ramakrishna at Belur math. The magnetic vibration of the Sandhya Aarti will capture your hear in the eternity. Let a serene evening conclude your day, much adored, with a gentle sail to the depth of spirituality. 


As the last troubled millennium drews to its close, we, in Travel and Tourism Corporation Ltd. (TTC) embrace the philosophy that nurtured one of the earliest of great civilizations in the world. We strive to define the goals of the civilized life in a very different way. While living at the abyss of the dreadful age of anxiety, away from individualism, materialism, rationality, and masculinity as the ideals of modern living, we hark and tender you some of the oldest callings of India – peace to soul, harmony in sharing, and realizing the nature of reality. All these and more, we offer you in the symbiosis of the spirit of the time, as you discover your soul, through the traveler in you.

Be it a jungle safari, enjoying finest gourmets with the maharajas, leaving you trails on the pristine beaches, or getting lost in the deep woods, TTC offers you an all-inclusive travel experience, with its extensive list of tie-up hotels, resorts, and travel services, so that you enjoy the mesmerizing hospitability, with a lasting impression. To celebrate the human life in the age of loneliness, as concerns are trying to touch your soul, we at TTC, are realizing the tantalizing imagination of technology, to touch your spirit. Claim your sphere in the concern of the spirit, to cherish the amazing continuity of life, called experience. 

Fulfilling, one of the most unique technologies of the modern day communication, TTC offers you the travel companion, to pass through like a flow of timeline, with tantalizing glimpses of your bountiful life. Avail the unique smart card technology to store and use information, as an aid to your itinerary. Scheduling your plan, make your bookings, or editing your schedule, all in one touch, using your smart card, with a dedicated login identity and password. Experience the plenty, in the premium and budget hotels with endless privileges, clubbed with the evolved communication technology of the TTC smart card.


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