Threshold & Welcome

Global Insight
0%

Arrival as a Deceleration

Arrival at the Nyas is designed as a deliberate slowing down. The one-way vehicular loop leads to a ceremonial forecourt, where cars pause at a colonnaded drop-off and pedestrians take over entirely. From this point onward, the campus belongs to the walker — to the pace of contemplation.
The Visitor Centre acts as a threshold: between the external world and the spiritual realm that lies within. Its architecture is extroverted, welcoming, and culturally expressive — establishing the ethos of shared heritage before a single gallery is entered.

Global Insight
0%

The Visitor Centre

The Visitor Centre is inspired by Punjab’s historic sarais (travellers’ rest-houses) and mandis (market courtyards) — large, colonnaded spaces that once welcomed everyone. Its forecourt is generous and shaded, its archways drawn from the Mughal and Sikh architectural heritage of Lahore and Amritsar.

MATERIAL PALETTE

These are materials that evoke timelessness — not power or wealth, but rootedness.

INTERACTIVE EXHIBITS AT THE ENTRANCE

Before entering the museum proper, visitors encounter introductory exhibits that contextualise what they are about to experience: the geography of undivided Punjab, its five rivers, its languages and faiths, its music and crafts — the world as it was before 1947.

Global Insight
0%

The Memorial of Undivided Punjab

The Memorial is not a monument to a single event or a single people. It belongs to all who were separated — Hindu, Sikh, Muslim — by a line that was drawn in weeks and felt for generations. Its design deliberately refuses grandeur or triumphalism.

DESIGN PRINCIPLES

Getting Here

Vehicles enter through the main gate and follow a counter-clockwise ceremonial loop. The loop includes a designated drop-off point directly in front of the Visitor Centre entrance. A separate service entry on the right side of the loop serves deliveries and maintenance — keeping the visitor experience free of operational traffic.

Golf carts are available for those with mobility requirements. All paths beyond the Visitor Centre are pedestrian-only.