Hanging Gardens of Bua Rani By Chander P Mahajan Hanging Garden of Kirti Cottage, Dalhousie Back home from Denmark in 1983, I had an urge to build a cottage in Dalhousie; and along the house, a Hanging Garden for my wife, Bua Rani. The area of the land was on the slopes of Potryn Hill, South East, behind the Sacred Heart convent School. Idea was to plant the grass, trees, flower beds in to an artistic garden adjoining the dwelling and even attached to the walls; a garden sustained at an artificial elevation like the mythical terraces of the ‘Hanging gardens of Babylon’ built by King Nebuchadnezzar II to make his wife, Amytis of Media, happy. The Gardens are the only one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world that may not even have existed. If it existed it was likely the most beautiful manmade gardens ever created; one of the greatest engineering achievements of ancient world. o Soon I crafted a ‘card board prototype’ of the hut out of my imagination, while in Dharamshala. My wife & sons- Aseem and Manu carried on, for months, with the additions and alterations in the elevations and fixing the railings with toothpicks, whatsoever they may have liked, before we gave it an ultimate shape. We came up with a split level design of the hut with attached gardens. o We were planning to build the garden high above the ground on split-level stone terraces where the plants would look as ‘floating’ but they, instead, would hang from these different terraces, giving them the appearance of being suspended in mid-air. In the ‘Hanging Gardens', the plants would not actually hang.