City Mall
324, Saraswati Marg, Ghaffar Market, Block 23, Beadonpura, Karol Bagh, New Delhi, Delhi 110005, India
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J5XR+RJ New Delhi, Delhi, India
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Monday: Close
Tuesday: 10–20
Wedneasday: 10–20
Thursday: 10–20
Friday: 10–20
Saturday: 10–20
Sunday: 10–20
Tuesday: 10–20
Wedneasday: 10–20
Thursday: 10–20
Friday: 10–20
Saturday: 10–20
Sunday: 10–20
Wide variety of accessories. Good place to buy electronic accessories. Only problem is heavy rush. Karol Bagh is very very crowded with severe parking problems. Any day of the week crowd is almost same
The City Mall will be coming up on the city’s most important thoroughfare, adjacent to the Instrumentation Township and only a kilometer from Talwandi, the main institutional hub. A 15 minutes drive will take you to the railway station and the bus stand while the airport lies merely 2.5 km away from the Mall. The famed Chambal gardens is situated at a distance of 5 km with Chambal river, the only perennial river in Rajasthan and the magnificent Kota Fort lying not very far from the Mall’s location. The catchments area of the City Mall will cover a target population of 2 million making it the most investor friendly location.
Archeological excavations at nearby locations of Rakhigarhi, Siswal, and Lohari Ragho suggest the presence of human habitation from pre-Harappanperiod. Later, Aryan people settled around Drsadvati River. The Jain literature Uttaradhayana Sutramentions a town Isukara in the Kuru country which is believed to be the earlier name of Hisar.[3] The kingdom of Hisar, with its capital at Agroha, possibly assisted Chandragupta Maurya in his war against the Greeks.[4] The kingdom was then included in the Mauryan Empire, as evidenced by the discovery of Ashokan pillars in the vicinity of the city. The city later came under the Kushan Empire and the Gupta Empire.[3] In the 12th century, the Chauhan king Prithviraj Chauhan made Hansi, located in the present day Hisar district, his capital and built a fort.[5] It remained a strategic place for Chauhan Empire until Prithviraj was defeated in the Second Battle of Tarainby the invading Ghurid ruler Muhammad Ghori