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The Imperial New Delhi
Home » Hotels & Resorts » Asia » India » New Delhi » The Imperial New Delhi
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This legendary five-star luxury hotel was built in 1931 as part of British architect Sir Edwin Lutyen’s grand design for New Delhi. Its unconventional appearance, a mixture of Victorian and old Colonial with a touch of Art Deco, makes it a distinctive landmark in the capital city.
Situated among eight acres of landscaped gardens right in the heart of New Delhi’s business, government and shopping districts, The Imperial’s stylish grandeur and warm, attentive service keeps regulars coming back, while the modern accoutrements make newcomers feel right at home.
Museum Hotel
Art has been synonymous with The Imperial since its inception. The hotel’s extensive collection of colonial images and memorabilia has earned The Imperial the moniker ‘Museum Hotel’. Each floor is dedicated to an artist whose original works adorn the walls of the rooms and corridors. The Royal Ballroom showcases a magnificent oil painting depicting the lavish colonial lifestyle of the early 1900s. The Lahore Lounge in the lobby features period art dedicated to the Anglo Sikh wars.
The Imperial has always been a magnet for high profile personalities. Pandit Nehru, Mahatma Gandhi, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and Lord Mountbatten met here in the 1930s to discuss the division of India and the creation of Pakistan. Today, royalty and celebrities make the hotel their home when visiting this region of India.
More than just a luxury hotel
The 233 rooms including 43 suites have high ceilings, impeccable décor and are equipped with modern conveniences and facilities. They overlook lush, verdant gardens and bespeak discreet luxury while offering total privacy and serenity. Deco Room, Imperial Room, Heritage Room, Grand Heritage Room, Eliza Room, Heritage Suite, Deco Suite, Luxury Suite and The Royal Imperial Suite offer an indelible experience designed to make your stay as perfect as possible in every way.
The four-poster king size bed with exclusive linen from Porthault, France gives an exclusive Victorian touch to the Luxury Suite. Eliza Rooms are specially designed for single female travellers to provide a distinct experience associated with comfort, convenience and care with safety prioritised.The rooms have enhanced security—calls are screened before they are put through—there are female butlers and housekeeping staff to ensure a relaxed stay and a basket of cosmetic and hair products greats guests.
The Royal Imperial Suite spans over 3000 square feet, including spacious dining and sitting areas and an expansive master bedroom and study. Porthault linens and a private steam room, sauna, and jacuzzi contribute to the suite’s overall feeling of elegant opulence.
Carefully designed and thoughtfully decorated for both discerning business and leisure guests, the rooms feature an electronic Cisa Safe, well-stocked mini bar, dual line phone with data port and voicemail, fax machine capability in all rooms and suites, Bang & Olufsen TV and DVD player in suites, Wi-Fi, clocks in rooms, electronic door lock, constant circulation of treated fresh air and TV offering 43 channels in various international languages. An iron, ironing board, packing and unpacking assistance is available on request, with 24-hour room service, tea/coffee making facility and international magazines available.
Award-winning restaurants
The Imperial also houses award-winning restaurants that offer a range of culinary options with a fusion of South-East Asian, Indian and Italian cuisines. Heralded as one of the top ten restaurants in the world by Condé Nast Traveler, The Spice Route restaurant is poetry in design showcasing the wonders of South-East Asian cuisine from six countries. The all-day dining at 1911 restaurant is replete with period art and is spread over three areas including the veranda and terrace overlooking the Imperial lawns. 1911 Bar offers over 500 varieties of beverages with lounge and club music playing to your mood.
The Imperial’s Italian specialty restaurant San Gimignano takes inspiration from the lovely city of San Gimignano in Italy and offers delectable Italian fare with alfresco dining. Daniell’s Tavern, a pan-Indian restaurant at The Imperial traces Thomas and William Daniell’s footsteps on a gastronomic journey through each of the places they visited. The Atrium with its high skylight ceiling, tropical surroundings and humming fountain creates just the right atmosphere for a meeting of any kind.
Patiala Peg, one of the most popular bars in Delhi lives up to its name, and serves larger measures of 75ml pegs instead of the usual 60ml. La Baguette, the pastry shop situated at the common entrance to the Royal Ballroom and 1911, tempts the sweetest tooth with its enviable range of goodies. The Royal Ballroom, spread over 5000 square feet, features a wooden sprung floor and is one of the only authentic ballrooms remaining in India, evoking the splendour of the era of lords and ladies.
Rest assured—a stay at The Imperial is nothing short of superb.
Guide to India
Capital and major centres
New Delhi, in the country's north, is the capital and major gateway. It is a contemporary, busy metropolis which combines both the influence of the British Raj with modern development interspersed with ancient monuments, some of which have even been incorporated into a golf course. Also in the north are Agra, Varanasi, Lucknow, Srinagar and Jaipur, Jodhpur, Udaipur, Chandigarh, Amritsar and Shimla. In the West are Mumbai (Bombay), Lonavala, Pune, Bhopal, Khajuraho, Gwalior, Ahmedabad, Vadodara and the coastal region of Goa and coastal Karnataka. The capital of Karnataka is Bangalore, which is in the South along with Hyderabad, Mysore, Chennai (Madras), Tiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum) and Kochi (Cochin). In the East is Kolkata (Calcutta), Bhubaneswar, Gopalpur on Sea, Port Blair in the Andaman Islands and Darjeeling, famous for its superb tasting teas and the World Heritage Toy Train.
The people
India's population is in excess of a billion people and its religions are many and varied. Hindu originated with the early Aryans and is not only a religion but a philosophy and way of life. Jainism and Buddhism were introduced in the 6th century BC and the Islamic teachings were brought to the country by Arab traders in the 7th century. The Afghans and Moghuls who followed were also Muslim, so the religion flourished. Christianity reached India with the arrival of St Thomas, the Apostle, and Zoroastrianism (whose total world population is no more than 140 000) found its way with followers who left their homeland in Iran following the Islamic conquest around 766 AD. Judaism dates back to 973 BC while Sikhism was introduced by Guru Nanak, its founder, in the 15th century. Hindi is the official language, popular in the north while in the south, Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam is spoken with hundreds of dialects between them. English continues to be widely spoken throughout India and helps bridge the many different dialects.
Nature
India is divided from the rest of Asia by mountains and sea. It is bound by the Great Himalayas in the north, stretches southward and at the Tropic of Cancer, tapers off into the Indian Ocean, between the Bay of Bengal in the East and the Arabian Sea in the West. One fifth of the land is covered with forests harbouring a variety of wildlife. Rare species like the Asian lion, the white tiger, the onehorned rhinoceros, and the Kashmir stag are protected animals.
The sights
There is so much to see in India. In Old Delhi the river Yamuna runs along the eastern boundary past the cremation sites of Mahatma Gandhi and prime ministers Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira and Rajiv Gandhi. The walls of the old city were built by Shah Jahan and are nearly nine kilometres long. The Ajmeri and Delhi gates are part of this old wall, which encloses the Red Fort. About 160kms south of New Delhi is the town of Mathura, once a great Buddhist centre and the legendary scene of Lord Krishna's playful exploits. Agra is 200 kilometres from the capital and was the seat of the great Moghul emperor Akbar who built a huge fort there which contained his palace known as the Jahangiri. His grandson, Shah Jahan, built the incomparable Taj Mahal between 1630 and 1652. Worth a visit is Akbar's proposed capital of Fatehpur Sikri, abandoned after only a few years, and the tomb of Akbar at Sikandra. Varanasi, arguably the world's oldest living city, was once the site of about 100 Hindu temples and 30 Buddhist monasteries. Most did not survive the Muslim occupation, but there is a sacred area called Varamaso which Hindus hope to visit once in their life. Thousands make the pilgrimage every year to bathe in the Ganges, a sacred river, and visit the holy Viswanath Temple (the domes of which are covered in solid gold) dedicated to Shiva, Lord of the Universe. In the northwest of the country is Rajasthan, with its capital at Jaipur (the Pink City) founded in 1728 by the warrior-astronomer Maharaja Jai Singh. Amritsar is the centre of the Sikh religion and is northwest of New Delhi near the Pakistan border. Chandigarh is a new town designed by the famous French architect Le Corbusier and is the capital of Punjab. North from here is the hill station of Shimla where the former British Government of India migrated every summer. From here it's a short trip to the twin valleys of Kulu and Kangra, which rival the Valley of Kashmir in beauty. Green with orchards and dotted with ancient Rajput forts on the summit of immense crags, these valleys are truly spectacular. In the southwest is the state of Karnataka, blessed with many natural features including majestic evergreen forests, rivers, caves, and a 320km coastline dotted with unspoilt beaches.
Where to stay
India offers accommodation in a variety of categories, including deluxe Western-style hotels, heritage and palace hotels, travellers' lodges, tourist bungalows, hostels and homestays. Fully furnished and staffed houseboats are a popular option in coastal areas. The main towns have YWCAs and YMCAs.
Getting around
City and country tours are offered in India, arranged either by national or state government tourism corporations. The city tours are good value. The rail system is a great way to see the country, and is fairly easy to navigate. Mumbai has the best suburban rail system in India, and Kolkata has a surprisingly efficient, clean underground rail line. Taxis are easy to come by in the main cities as are buses which operate on many suburban routes and are very crowded. Scooter taxis or three-wheelers are convenient, fast and cheap for getting round the cities. They have meters and the drivers speak some English. Chauffeur driven cars carry up to four passengers and their rates depend on petrol prices. There are also rickshaws, particularly in Kolkata and Tongas and Victoria carriages (horse-drawn vehicles) in several cities. Pedal trishaws still operate, mostly in the smaller towns.
Food and entertainment
Indians are masters at spicing foods and the technique is found in the preparation (grinding and rolling) of the ingredients. Not every dish is a curry a good deal of food, particularly in the north, is not hot, just richly garnished to provide exciting flavours. Mumbai is famous for its seafood, while Goa has Indo-Portuguese dishes and Chinese food. Tibetan restaurants are plentiful in the hill towns and are very inexpensive. If hot food disagrees with you stick to tandoori-style dishes which don't have hot spices, or chicken cooked Muslim-style after being lightly spiced and added to a casserole with dried fruits. For entertainment, most major hotels feature dinner and dancing and most of the big cities have nightclubs and bars. Traditional entertainment can be enjoyed at special evenings for visitors at some hotels or at concerts.
Activities
Hockey, cricket, polo, football, volleyball and basketball are all played by Indians and in the hill stations ponies can be hired for excursions to the glaciers' edge. Ski resorts at Gulmarg in Kashmir and Auli in the state of Uttaranchal are popular for snow skiing and heli skiing, and on some of the Himalayan snowfields to the northeast and near Shimla. The season runs from December to January.There's whitewater canoeing on the Ganges' tributaries and on the Zanskar, Indus, Chenab and Lidder rivers in Kashmir. Ballooning has become popular with a club at Safdarjung Airport in New Delhi. Other activities include camel safaris, trekking and hang-gliding in the Himalayas, or exploring woodlands and orchards of the Western Ghats or Aravali hills.
Shopping
Shopping is an experience in itself in India, be prepered to bargin for the best price in the many bazzars and emporiums. There are many wonderful handicrafts from Kashmir's hand-loomed rugs, furs, papier-mache utensils and pashmina shawls, jewels and brassware from Jaipur, and silks from Varanasi and Bangalore. You can see a multitude of handicrafts at Connaught Place in New Delhi. Also at the Central Cottage Industries Emporium on Janpath Rd and nearby, along Baba Kharak Singh Marg in New Delhi, are various state emporia each run by their state governments.
Currency
Indian rupee divided into 100 paise. Visitors can't bring in or take out any Indian currency except in the form of travellers' cheques. No restrictions on foreign currency amounts. Tipping is appreciated as wages are low by Western standards.
Climate
There are three major seasons: winter, summer and the monsoon. The winter, from November to March, is pleasant with bright sunny days in the south and east, but in December and January in the north, the temperature drops and there is snow in the hills. In summer, April to June, it is very hot and humid, and many head to the cool hill resorts. The southwest monsoon breaks about early June and continues until September. The southeastern areas receive rainfall between October and December. Wear cool, light, cotton clothes in the south and northern plains from April to September. Warmer clothes are advisable for the north during winter. In New Delhi an overcoat may be required during December and January.