29 January,2023 10:51 AM IST | Patna | Agencies
A cluster of pillars salvaged from the Dutch-era record room building. Pic/PTI
The Dutch-era Record Room Building of the Patna Collectorate with a colonnaded frontage that featured in Oscar-winning film Gandhi has been demolished, but a few pillars of the historic landmark have been salvaged for posterity.
The over 300-year-old majestic building, which ran on a north-south axis on the banks of the Ganga river in Patna, had high ceilings, massive doors and unique skylights on its roof. It was also the oldest structure on the 12-acre campus of the old collectorate.
Also Read: Bihar: Administration says it was religious flag, not Pakistani
The fate of the historic collectorate complex was sealed on May 13 last year when the Supreme Court rejected a plea by Delhi-based heritage body INTACH for its preservation, paving the way for its demolition by the Bihar government, triggering grief among heritage lovers and Gandhians. By May 17, the British-era structure as well as the Dutch-era Record Room Building were reduced to mountains of rubble.
ALSO READ
3 children killed, 8 injured in head-on collision between truck, autorickshaw near Patna
Lubi Industries LLP Ropes In Patna Pirates Too As An Associate Sponsor For Season 11 Of The Pro Kabaddi League
Railway employee in Bihar loses life after being struck by train during duty
Allu Arjun's stardom pulls over 2 lakh people for Pushpa 2 trailer event
Politics without morality is hypocrisy: Patnaik
"However, we have preserved the pillars from its frontage," says a top official, adding, "Once the new complex comes up, these pillars will also be prominently displayed on the campus so that people can see both the modern structures and a piece of the past."
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever