Safdarjung_(Delhi)

Safdarjung (Delhi)

Safdarjung (Delhi)

Neighborhood in South Delhi, Delhi, India


Safdarjung area consists of mainly two localities in South Delhi, namely Safdarjung Enclave and Safdarjung Development Area (SDA).[2][3] There are several districts (called colonies) in Delhi located south of the tomb of Safdarjung, the second Nawab of Awadh, an important administrator in the Mughal Imperial courts in Delhi, under Muhammad Shah in the 18th century.

Quick Facts Safdar Jung, Country ...
Safdarjung's tomb, Delhi, after which the area is named

Safdarjung Enclave

Durga Puja celebrations, Matri Mandir, Safdarjung Enclave, Delhi, 2014

Safdarjung Enclave, developed by the Delhi Lease and Finance later DLF Limited after acquiring the farmlands from Humayunpur Village in the early 1960s under then Prime Minister Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru is located just south of the Ring Road and north of the Hauz Khas Deer Park. South of Hauz Khas village is the Safdarjung Development Area (SDA), built in the 1960s as an extension towards the south. Both colonies are primarily residential.

Safdarjung Enclave built after the Partition did not include land grants for refugees from what is now Pakistan.

The airstrip next to Safdarjung's Tomb that occupies the area between it and Safdarjung Enclave, formerly Delhi's main airport, is now known as Safdarjung Airport and is the home of the Delhi Flying Club. Many official flights for the Central and State government also leave and arrive here rather than at Delhi's main airport Indira Gandhi International Airport (formerly Palam Airport).

Major Schools in Safdarjung Enclave

--Hospitals in Safdarjung Enclave--

Major Schools in SDA

Healthcare Centers in SDA

See also


References

  1. "Pin code 110029, Safdarjung Enclave S.O Post Office in South West Delhi, Delhi".
  2. "RS MPs still looking for a plot". The Times of India. 12 January 2006. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012.
  3. "St. Paul's School, Safdarjung Development Area". The Hindu. 20 July 2007. Archived from the original on 19 March 2011.

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