The Free Press Journal

‘Tourist entry at Taj Mahal to be capped at 40K daily, for max 3 hours’

- AGENCIES

The Archaeolog­ical Survey of India is likely to restrict the number of tourists visiting the Taj Mahal to 40,000 daily, and put a three-hour cap on each ticket holder to tour the 17th-century Mughal monument in a bid to preserve the heritage site, a source in the culture ministry told PTI.

Culture Secretary Ravindra Singh held a high-level meeting on Tuesday with ASI officials and representa­tives of Agra district administra­tion and officers of the Central Industrial Security Force, where the decision was taken.

Ministry officials said that the sale of tickets – both online and offline – will be stopped at the 40,000 mark.

As of now, there is no restrictio­n on the number of people entering the iconic monument complex at any point of time. The average footfall at the monument has increased at a rate of 10-15 per cent per annum.

Many times, during peak tourist season and other occasions, the number of tourists inside the complex crosses 60,000 to 70,000 per day.

The ASI is also likely to introduce a system to issue “zero-value” tickets to children below the age of 15 years, enabling them to keep a count of the number of such visitors, whose entry will remain free.

The ASI had in 2012 commission­ed the National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g and Research Institute (NEERI) to prepare a report on the monument’s loadbearin­g capacity.

The decision to limit the number of visitors has been based on the final recommenda­tion in the report submitted by NEERI, the officials said.

The Taj Mahal is considered one of the finest specimen of the Mughal architectu­re. In 1983, it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site and was cited as “the jewel of Muslim art in India and one of the universall­y admired masterpiec­es of the world’s heritage.”

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