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  • Roof of the recently restored Shahi Hammam, Lahore, Pakistan. Under the Aga Khan Trust for Culture’s aegis, the conservation of the 17th century Mughal period Shahi Hammam – a public bathhouse in Delhi Gate – was completed in June 2015.
    Matthieu Paley
  • The Aga Khan Trust for Culture, in partnership with the Government of the Punjab and the World Bank, is helping to revitalise the Walled City of Lahore, in Punjab, Pakistan.
    Matthieu Paley
  • Kotwali Bazaar, looking west along the north facade of the Wazir Khan Mosque, Walled City of Lahore, Pakistan.
    AKDN / Christian Richters
  • Deewan-e-Khass, Lahore Fort, Lahore, Pakistan.
    AKDN / Adrien Buchet
  • Shahi Hammam, Lahore, Pakistan. In 2013 intensive work focused on the two key monuments of the Shahi Hammam and the Wazir Khan Mosque. The former was completed in 2015 to high acclaim and opened under the management of the Walled City of Lahore Authority (WCLA); it received an Award of Merit in UNESCO's Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage in 2016. It is said to have received 20,000 visits in the first five months after its opening and has become, as intended, a major node on the heritage route through Delhi Gate.
    AKDN / Adrien Buchet
Walled city of Lahore conservation

Lahore, the capital of the province of Punjab, and the second most populous city in Pakistan, is also known as the "Gardens of the Mughals" or "City of Gardens" due to its Mughal heritage when it served as a vital part of the Mughal Empire (1524 to 1752).  This once fortified city has a concentration of monuments and buildings that reflect cultural diversity in architecture, and despite a dynamic and tumultuous past spanning several centuries, has retained much of its historic urban form.  Upon the completion of the Shigar Fort project in 2005, the Government of Pakistan requested that AKTC make technical contributions to the World Bank-funded area development “pilot” known as the ShahiGuzargah (Royal Trail) project, in the Walled City of Lahore.

The Walled City of Lahore is famous for several historic monuments, including the Lahore Fort – a World Heritage site – as well as the Badshahi and Wazir Khan mosques.  Close to 2,000 buildings within the Walled City display a range of architectural features that mark Lahore’s centuries-old cultural landscape.  A majority of these buildings and the mohallas (local neighbourhoods) in which they are situated form a unique heritage footprint.

The work consequently carried out by AKTC and AKCSP was initiated under a 2007 public-private partnership framework agreement with the Government of Punjab.  The first phase of the project, completed in 2014, was comprised of the design and improvement of infrastructure services and the documentation of major Mughal period monuments. An important social and economic dimension aimed at poverty alleviation and the creation of economic opportunities for local residents was facilitated through community participation in the projects.  The technical engagement of AKTC continues currently on the basis of an MOU with the Walled City of Lahore Authority (WCLA).  The AKTC assistance programme is likely to continue in the foreseeable future.