The  Rock Garden of Chandigarh is a 40-acre park full of plazas, waterfalls  and thousands of unique creatures made from recycled materials. It’s a  truly impressive sight, but even more so is the story of how Nek Chand  spent four decades creating it and how he kept it a secret, for years.  More images after the break...
In  1958, Nek Chand was a road inspector for the Public Works Department,  and was making rafts and boats to be sail upon the recently created  Sukhna Lake, but peddle boats were soon made available for rent by  authorities, and his craft was banned. This allowed Nek to devote more  time to his passion for rocks and stones, and he began gathering them  from the nearby Shivalik Hills, and the Sukhna Cho, Patiala Rao and  Ghaggar rivers. It was around this time that the Swiss architect Le  Corbusier was asked to design the city of Chandigarh, the first planned  city of India, and the small villages around the area were demolished.  This provided Nek Chand with plenty of material for his increasing  collection of rocks.
In  1965, after putting together an impressive collection of waste from the  destroyed villages, Nek Chand began dreaming of a fairytale kingdom of  his own. After all, he was working on creating the utopian city of  Chandigarh, so he wondered if he couldn’t create a world of his own, out  of the rabble he spent so much time gathering. He found a secluded  gorge, in the forest on the outskirts of the city, and decided that’s  where he was going to build his magical kingdom. At the end of each work  day, he would disappear into the forest and tend to his vision, at the  light of burning tires. Nek was afraid this dream of his would cost him  his job, since it was very much an illegal project, but this didn’t stop  him from expanding the Rock Garden with each passing day. Shards of  broken pots and bottles, brick fragments and natural stones, these were  the main ingredients used to create a unique world, inhabited by  marvelous creatures.
Eventually,  he built up the courage to see M.N. Sharma, Chandigarh’s chief  architect about his marvelous project. Reluctant to accompany Nek Chand  into the forest, this disciple of Le Corbusier eventually agreed.  Although he should have had it demolished, Sharma later said the  admiration for Nek Chand’s amazing Rock Garden and its creative  potential was much stronger than his duty as chief architect, so he  advised Nek to continue his work in secret, until he could convince the  world that, though illegal and unauthorized, the Rock Garden is a  masterpiece that should be preserved.
It  took a year for M.N. Sharma to convince Indian authorities, but his  efforts paid off, and Rock Garden finally got the recognition it  deserved. Nek Chand received authorization to expand his project on  another 25 acres, and the Rock Garden was open to the public, in 1976.  Its creator worked under threat of imprisonment and the demolition of  the project, for 18 years, but it all paid off, in the end. Ever since  he first started working on it, recycling was a very important part, but  after it was finally authorized, it became even more so. Nek set up  waste collection centers across Chandigarh, at hospitals, hotels,  restaurants and other big waste suppliers. He kept working on it, until  just a few years ago.
Today,  an estimated 5,000 people from all around India and abroad come to see  Nek Chand’s Rock Garden, every day. It practically went from being a  secret, unauthorized fantasy, to India’s second most popular tourist  attraction, after the Taj Mahal. How is that for an incredible turn of  events?


















 
 
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