Slow Travel | In the vast Qutub Complex of Delhi, there stands a curious relic known as the Smith’s Folly. It’s one such piece of structure which would render itself obnoxious without its historical context. The Folly is a chhatri which Major Robert Smith of the British Indian Army added. The addition came in a moment of sympathetic genius by the Major after the original cupola was damaged in an earthquake. The chhatri looked so out of place at the top of Qutub Minar that Lord Hardinge—then the Governor-General, but who also enjoyed an infamous reputation otherwise—ordered for it to be removed at the first opportunity.
Heritage
Architecture Without Purpose: Tracing Monuments And Sites That Remind You To Slow Down
A pensive traveller traces architecture built not for function but for reflection, madness, and beauty—a meditation on structures that serve no purpose but to make us pause

People sit around the kare-sansui (dry landscape) zen garden at Ryōan-ji
Photo: Shutterstock
People sit around the kare-sansui (dry landscape) zen garden at Ryōan-ji
Photo: Shutterstock

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