Ayodhya Ram Mandir likely to open for devotees by the end of 2023 India News – Times of India

New Delhi: The Ram temple in Ayodhya is expected to open for devotees by the end of 2023, when five mandapas (halls) will be ready on the ground along with the sanctum sanctorum (sanctum sanctorum) where there is an idol of Lord Rama as a child. will be kept.
The entire complex, which will total 110 acres and include 66 acres granted by the Supreme Court, is likely to be ready sometime in 2025. The complex will include a museum to interpret the manuscripts and legal history of the Ram temple as a court dispute. The date of the time of British administration.
The final cost of the temple is expected to be in the region of Rs 900-1,000 crore. It is likely to open to the public a few months before the schedule for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.
In a background briefing, sources said that since the foundation stone ceremony on August 5, 2020, significant issues have been spent in sorting out the critical issues of foundation material and preparing the site for construction. “It may seem that a year has passed and no construction took place on the ground. But it was found that the debris beneath the site was as deep as 12 meters,” the source said.
The deep pit needs to be filled with roller compacted concrete which mainly consists of fly ash along with aggregate sand and cement. It is not yet decided whether the idol to be placed in the sanctum sanctorum will be placed under a temporary structure after the demolition of the Babri Masjid on 6 December 1992. “This decision will be taken by the sadhus. Of course, the (existing) idol Ram Lalla Will be in the temple,” said the source.
The main temple will have three floors and five mandapas and will be 360 ​​feet in length, 235 feet in width and 20 feet in height each. The summit will be 160 feet above the ground. Heritage structures like Kuber Tila and Sita Kup will be preserved and developed.
Since it can take around 3 hours for a devotee to reach the sanctum sanctorum, the complex is being developed in such a way that there will be places of interest for the visitors going into the inner part of the temple.
The stone required for the construction is being procured from Bansi Paharpur area of ​​Rajasthan. Mining was stopped there, but the stones required for the temple are being procured in lieu of afforestation. The stone that was worked on for many years at Ramasevakapuram in Ayodhya will also be used, with about 70% of the estimated 40,000 cubic feet being used.

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