![]() ![]() ![]() ::::::::::::Property Specifications ::::::::::::Spread across a super area of 1400 sq ft and a carpet area of 1200 sq ft, this house on the ground floor is blessed with ample natural sunlight and ventilation. ![]() Situated in Kolar Gold Fields, Kolar, this house is new with a construction age of less than 5 years and is absolutely ready to move in with your loved ones. KGF is a ghost town, peppered with crumbling godowns, buildings, clubs and grocery stores - vestiges of a golden past.Thoughtfully built with vaastu rules, this east facing 2BHK residential house is available for sale. Today, these labourers and their children continue to stay in shanties and in the former workers’ colony, but their jobs are in Bengaluru, two hours away. Despite some assurances, former workers were not resettled nor mining restarted. ![]() After 1947, KGF became Bharat Gold Mines Ltd., but gold production slowly became untenable and the town soon lost its lustre. KGF was contributing all of India’s gold output, accounting for 2% of the world’s gold generation. Trains, electric trams, electric clocks, telephones, a golf course, and even filtered water were introduced here much before the rest of India.īy the 1920s, 24,000 people were working here, drawn from socio-economically backward communities in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. Profits were huge, and KGF became the site for many of India’s firsts: India’s first hydroelectric power generation unit was created on the Cauvery to support the mining the town was India’s first to be electrified (second in Asia). With the arrival of the British Raj, and the introduction of machines, the town turned into a large-scale gold mine by the 1850s, the world’s second deepest. Gold was perhaps first mined in the area in 200 AD, and later, during the Chola period (900-1000 AD), it became a recognisable gold mine. The gathering rust and the pervasive silence are a reminder of the fall of India’s gold rush town. “He didn’t wear even a scrap of gold in his life.” The day brings back not just the memories of his grandfather but also of the bitter end to the work at the mines.ĭecrepit iron shafts of former mines stand tall over the town. “The man resting in this small space, six feet under, was once responsible for bringing up gold from nearly 8,000 feet underground,” says Murugan with a wry smile. On All Souls Day on November 2, hundreds of believers across faiths arrive at the many graveyards that dot the Kolar Gold Fields (KGF), some 100 kilometres from Bengaluru. ![]()
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January 2023
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