The Basics
Chandigarh at a Glance
A small, meticulously planned city at the foot of the Shivaliks — a Union Territory that serves as the capital of two states, and a modernist landmark in its own right.
- Shared capital The capital of both Punjab and Haryana, while itself being a Union Territory
- A UT Directly administered, with no legislative assembly; the Administrator is, by convention, the Governor of Punjab
- ~114 km² Area — a single small, planned city
- 1 district The UT is one district, laid out in numbered sectors of about 800 × 1,200 m
- The City Beautiful Designed by Le Corbusier — independent India's first planned city
- The Tricity Forms a "Tricity" with Mohali (Punjab) and Panchkula (Haryana)
- English The official language of the administration; Hindi and Punjabi are widely spoken
- The Shivaliks At the Himalayan foothills, bordered by Punjab and Haryana; Sukhna Lake at the city's edge
- 1 MP 1 Lok Sabha seat; as a UT without a legislature, it has no Rajya Sabha seat
- The sectors Famously had no Sector 13 for decades — until Manimajra was designated Sector 13 in 2020
- ~321 m Average elevation, on the gently sloping plain below the hills
People
Population & Society
A small but very densely settled, highly literate and affluent city — built by migration, with a strong Punjabi character and one of India's highest standards of living. Census 2011 is the last full count.
- 10.55 lakh Population, 2011 (1,055,450) — a small UT, essentially one city
- 17.2% Decadal growth, 2001–2011 — migration-driven, though slower than earlier decades
- 9,258 /km² Population density, 2011 — among the highest of any state or UT (after Delhi)
- 818 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011 — low, reflecting a migrant-labour inflow
- 86.0% Literacy rate, 2011 — well above the national average
- 97.2% Urbanisation, 2011 — almost entirely a city
- Faith Hindu ~81%, Sikh ~13% (its Punjab links), Muslim ~5% (2011); SC ~19%, with no Scheduled Tribes
- Languages Hindi the largest mother tongue (~73%), with a large Punjabi-speaking community
- Affluent, unequal Among India's highest per-capita incomes and quality of life — yet planned sectors sit beside labour & resettlement colonies
Economy
A White-Collar City
A high-income, almost entirely services economy — government, IT, finance, education and health — with very little industry or farming, and one of India's highest incomes per head.
- ~₹54,000 cr GSDP, around 2022-23 (current prices) — a small economy by absolute size
- Top tier Among India's highest per-capita incomes — around the top handful of states & UTs (after Sikkim, Goa & Delhi)
- Services Overwhelmingly tertiary — government, IT/ITeS, finance, trade, education, health & tourism; minimal industry
- Sector 17 The historic pedestrian commercial heart — banking, retail & services for the whole region
The engines of the economy
- Government As the capital of two states plus the UT administration, public employment is a large part of the economy
- IT Park The Rajiv Gandhi Chandigarh Technology Park (2005) — Infosys, Tech Mahindra and others — an emerging IT hub
- Tricity belt With Mohali's IT & education clusters and Panchkula (both outside the UT), the wider Tricity is a major regional economy
- Tourism The Rock Garden, Sukhna Lake and the Capitol draw visitors year-round
- Figures are the latest broadly-cited estimates (GSDP ~2022-23; per-capita ~2023-24). Mohali and Panchkula — much of the Tricity's industry & IT — lie in Punjab and Haryana, outside the Chandigarh UT.
Le Corbusier's Vision
The First Planned City
Conceived by Nehru as a symbol of a new India and designed by Le Corbusier as a "living organism" — a grid of sectors laid out like a human body.
- Nehru's city Independent India's first planned city — Nehru called it an expression of the nation's faith in the future
- Le Corbusier The Swiss-French modernist took over the plan in 1950–51 (after Albert Mayer & Matthew Nowicki), with Pierre Jeanneret, Maxwell Fry & Jane Drew
- A human body The plan as a body — the "head" (the Capitol), the "heart" (Sector 17), the "lungs" (the green Leisure Valley)
- The sectors Self-contained rectangular sectors (~800 × 1,200 m), each a neighbourhood — Le Corbusier's take on the Indian mohalla
- The 7 Vs A hierarchy of seven road types (the "7 Vs"), from fast regional roads down to quiet pedestrian & cycle paths
- Icon & critique A celebrated modernist masterpiece — also critiqued for rigid zoning and the unplanned colonies that grew alongside it
A World Heritage Site
The Capitol Complex
At Sector 1, Le Corbusier's monumental government buildings in raw concrete — and the Open Hand, the city's emblem — form India's only UNESCO-listed work by the architect.
- Three buildings The Secretariat, the Legislative Assembly and the High Court — sculptural béton-brut (raw concrete) monuments around a vast plaza
- The Open Hand A giant rotating metal "Open Hand" (~26 m) — Chandigarh's official emblem, "open to give and open to receive"
- The monuments With the Tower of Shadows, the Geometric Hill and the Martyrs' Memorial across the Capitol plaza
- UNESCO, 2016 Inscribed as part of "The Architectural Work of Le Corbusier" (17 sites across 7 countries) — the only Indian component
What Makes Chandigarh Unique
Design, Green & the Good Life
A modernist masterpiece, a city built from recycled waste, one of India's cleanest and greenest places, and among its highest standards of living.
- A design icon Le Corbusier's planned city and its UNESCO Capitol — a global landmark of modern architecture
- The Rock Garden Nek Chand's sculpture garden built secretly from urban waste — one of India's most famous attractions
- Clean & green Among India's cleanest cities (near the top of the Swachh rankings) and its greenest — the highest tree-cover share of any state or UT
- High living Among India's highest per-capita incomes, high literacy and a famously orderly, liveable city
- A learning hub Panjab University and PGIMER anchor a major education & medical centre for North India
- Two capitals in one A single city that houses the governments of two states — a constitutional arrangement found nowhere else
Culture & Food
Punjabi at Heart, Modern in Style
A young, affluent, cosmopolitan city on a strong Punjabi cultural base — its food, music and gardens, and a famous café and nightlife scene.
- Punjabi base A strong Punjabi culture of bhangra, music & food, blended with Haryanvi & North Indian influences
- Café city A lively young, professional, student culture — the cafés & nightlife of Sectors 17 and 26
- The food Hearty Punjabi fare — butter chicken, sarson da saag & makki di roti, and the dhaba tradition
- Rose Festival The annual Festival of Gardens / Rose Festival at the Rose Garden each spring, with Baisakhi & Teej
- Art & museums The Le Corbusier-designed Government Museum & Art Gallery, with one of India's finest Gandhara sculpture collections
- Pierre Jeanneret The city's original teak-and-cane furniture, designed by Pierre Jeanneret, is now world-famous and highly collectible
Places to Visit
Gardens, Lakes & Concrete
A fantastical garden of recycled waste, a lakeside promenade, a vast rose garden and the great modernist Capitol — Chandigarh's sights are its design and its greenery.
- Rock Garden Nek Chand's ~40-acre sculpture garden of recycled urban & industrial waste — the city's most-visited wonder
- Sukhna Lake The man-made lake (1958) at the foot of the Shivaliks — boating, a promenade and winter migratory birds
- Rose Garden The Zakir Hussain Rose Garden in Sector 16 — reputedly Asia's largest, with thousands of rose varieties
- Capitol Complex The UNESCO buildings and the Open Hand — visited on a guided tour from the tourism office
- The museums The Government Museum & Art Gallery and the International Dolls Museum
- Green spaces The Leisure Valley, the Terraced Garden, the Garden of Fragrance and the Sukhna wildlife sanctuary
- Sector 17 The open pedestrian plaza — shopping, the fountain & the city's social heart
- Nearby Just outside the UT, in Haryana — the Cactus Garden (Panchkula) and the Mughal Pinjore Gardens
Modern Chandigarh
Smart, Green & on Wheels
A clean, green smart city and a leading education & medical hub — but also a city of record car ownership, still waiting on a metro.
- PGIMER & PU PGIMER (a top national medical institute) and Panjab University make Chandigarh a leading education & healthcare hub for North India
- Cleanest & greenest Near the top of the Swachh cleanliness rankings, with the highest tree-cover share of any state or UT (2023)
- Cycle city One of India's most extensive networks of dedicated cycle tracks, plus a public bicycle-sharing system
- Car capital One of India's highest vehicle densities — registered vehicles outnumber the people
- Metro pending A city metro has been proposed for years and repeatedly revised — but is not yet built; buses (now adding electric) carry the load
- Smart & solar A Smart-City programme with a strong rooftop-solar and EV push toward cleaner energy
Road, Rail & Air
The Gateway to the Hills
A grid of wide, tree-lined roads, fast rail to Delhi, an airport in the Tricity, and the road to Shimla and Manali — Chandigarh is the gateway to Himachal.
- Airport Shaheed Bhagat Singh International Airport (renamed 2022), which sits in Mohali and serves the Tricity — domestic plus select Gulf flights
- Rail Chandigarh Junction, with fast Shatabdi trains to Delhi (about 3 hours) and links across the north
- The 7 Vs grid Le Corbusier's wide, tree-lined sector roads — among India's best-planned urban road networks
- Hill gateway The launch-point for Shimla, Manali and the Himachal hills, and on the Delhi–Amritsar corridor
- CTU buses The Chandigarh Transport Undertaking runs the city & regional buses, now adding electric vehicles
- Cycle tracks A long network of dedicated cycle tracks threads the sectors — a rarity among Indian cities
People & Heritage
The Makers of the City
A visionary prime minister, the architects who drew the city, and the humble road inspector who built its most magical garden.
- Jawaharlal Nehru The prime minister who willed a brand-new modern city into being as a symbol of free India
- Le Corbusier The Swiss-French modernist who master-planned Chandigarh and designed the Capitol
- Pierre Jeanneret Le Corbusier's cousin and the city's resident architect for ~15 years; his ashes were scattered in Sukhna Lake
- Fry & Drew The British architects Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew, who designed much of the housing
- Nek Chand The road inspector who secretly built the Rock Garden from waste over nearly two decades
- M.S. Randhawa The first Chief Commissioner and botanist behind the city's gardens, including the Rose Garden
Through the Ages
A Short History of Chandigarh
From the farmland and villages of the site to a new capital born of Partition, and a city shared between two states — a few milestones that shaped Chandigarh.
| When | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Antiquity | The region holds Harappan-era settlements; relics were later found near the site |
| Pre-1950 | The site is farmland and roughly two dozen villages, acquired for the new city |
| 1947 | Partition — Lahore, Punjab's capital, goes to Pakistan; East Punjab needs a new one |
| 1948 | The site is selected at the foot of the Shivaliks |
| 1950–51 | Le Corbusier is engaged (after Mayer & Nowicki) and reworks the plan into a grid |
| 1952 | Nehru lays the foundation stone; construction begins |
| 1953 | Chandigarh is inaugurated as the capital of Punjab |
| 1950s–60s | Le Corbusier's Capitol Complex buildings rise in Sector 1 |
| 1 Nov 1966 | Punjab is reorganised; Haryana is created and Chandigarh becomes a UT & shared capital |
| 1976 | Nek Chand's Rock Garden opens to the public |
| 1985 | The Rajiv–Longowal Accord proposes transferring Chandigarh to Punjab (not implemented) |
| 2016 | The Capitol Complex becomes a UNESCO World Heritage Site |