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Jagmandir Island Palace
Welcome To Jagmandir Island Palace
The island palace of Jagmandir is one of the most exclusive and exquisite venues of HRH Group. Jagmandir's Garden Courtyard can accommodate between 50
to 304 guests for sit-down banquets; upto 500 guests can be catered for buffet style dining.
The Darikhana is a cosy colonnaded venue for upto 40 guests who can enjoy spectacular views of The City Palace during sit-down dinners. Special lighting at Darikhana makes for a truly romantic setting.
Jagmandir's Top Terrace is an even more exclusive and private venue where only 30 guests can be served. The views of the lake, mountains, island palaces and The City Palace are breath taking.
Kunwarpada Lawns have been developed to host dinners for 40 to 100 guests (upto 300 guests for buffet style dining); the lush-green illuminated lawns are on the edge of the lake
Baadi Mahal, City Palace Complex
The Baadi Mahal is an exclusive garden courtyard in the Mardana Mahal (palace for the royal men) provides an opportunity to organize exclusive dinners, preferably in the traditional Indian floor-seating arrangement, for groups of upto 50 guests.

Mor Chowk, City Palace Complex
The historic Mor Chowk in the Mardana Mahal (palace for the royal men) is ideal for exclusive banquets for small groups of 20 to 50 guests who can absorb the grandeur of the palace. The traditional Indian floor-seating arrangement is recommended for dinners at Mor Chowk.

Jagriti is a 'heritage exhibition onsite' at Jagmandir, the island palace on Lake Pichola. It is a manifestation of the multilayered research undertaken as part of 'The City within a City' project in 2001-02. Rare paintings, old photographs, maps and contemporary architectural drawings have been brought together to facilitate the understanding of how Jagmandir evolved from the seventeenth century onwards and continues to grow in the twenty-first century. Jagriti is located on the ground floor of Gol Mahal. The first section, exhibited in the colonnaded veranda, is devoted to the five Maharanas-Maharana Karan Singh (1620-28), Maharana Jagat Singh I (1628-52), Maharana Sangram Singh II (1710-34), Maharana Bhupal Singh (1930-55) and Shri Arvind Singh Mewar (1984- ) - who contributed to the development of Jagmandir. The posters in the inner chamber were created from old photographs of Jagmandir and Gol Mahal, retrieved from old albums in the Maharana Mewar Special Library.
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