Rashtrapati Bhavan
- Alternate Title:
- Viceroy's House (formerly)
- Title:
- Rashtrapati Bhavan
- Collection:
- Beyond the Taj: Architectural Traditions and Landscape Experience in South Asia
- Architect:
- Lutyens, Edwin (1869-1944)
- Photographer:
- MacDougall, Robert D. (Robert Duncan), 1940-1987
- Date:
- 1912-1930
- Location:
- New Delhi (Delhi, India)
- Country:
- India
- ID Number:
- MCD_06672
- Call Number:
- B-Q5 Ndel 2.44 Rast 5-1
- File Name:
- MCD_06672.jpg
- Style/Period:
- Colonial Indian Styles
- Work Type:
- official residences
- Subject:
- Domes (Dome Components)
gates
Columns
palaces
official residences - Image View Description:
- Ext.: gate leading to Viceroy's Court with Jaipur Column, centre
- Description:
- Built as the Viceroy's House . Now the official residence of the President of India. Dates: 1912-30. Built by Edwin Lutyens, and inaugurated in 1937.
- Notes:
- Image and original data maintained by the Cornell University Library. This digital collection is a result of a long-term collaboration between Professor Bonnie G. MacDougall, Department of Architecture and Margaret N. Webster, Director of the George W. & Adelaide Knight Visual Resources Facility in the College of Architecture, Art and Planning.
- Source:
- MacDougall, R. D.
- Repository:
- Bonnie G. MacDougall (original photographs)
- Rights:
- The images in the collection are protected by copyright, and the copyright holder is the Estate of their creator/photographer, Robert “Scotty” MacDougall. Images in the collection were created between roughly 1960-1987, and were digitized by Cornell University Library from a variety of negatives, positives, and slides retained by the Estate of the photographer. Cornell is providing access to the materials for research and personal use. The written permission of any copyright and other rights holders is required for distribution, reproduction, or other use that extends beyond what is authorized by fair use and other statutory exemptions. Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item.