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HERITAGE · STEPWELL

Adalaj Stepwell

Five storeys of carved stone descending into cool shadow — a 15th-century well that is part engineering, part temple, part love story.

AT A GLANCE Quick Facts
📍 LOCATION Adalaj, ~18 km north of the city
🪜 TYPE Stepwell (vav)
🗓️ BUILT 1499 · Queen Rudabai
🕗 TIMINGS 6:00 AM – 6:00 PM, daily
🎟️ ENTRY Free (nominal for foreign visitors)
☀️ BEST SEASON November – February
⏱️ DURATION 45 – 60 minutes
🚗 NEAREST CITY Gandhinagar
ABOUT THE PLACE

A cool, carved descent into the earth

From the surface, Adalaj gives little away — just an opening in the ground and the tops of some carved pavilions. Then you start down the steps, and a hidden world unfolds: five storeys of intricately worked stone descending into deep, cool shade, with the water waiting far below.

Built in 1499 at the order of Queen Rudabai, the well was both a lifeline and a sanctuary — a place to draw water, shelter from the heat and pause at the small shrines carved into its walls. Octagonal landings, pillared galleries and panels of flowers, dancers and everyday life line the descent.

It is also wrapped in legend: of a Vaghela queen, an invading sultan and a promise that ended in tragedy. True or not, the story suits the place — beautiful, shadowed and quietly sad.

Light falls to the water far below the entrance.

HISTORY

From a riverside experiment to the road to freedom

The carved storeys of Rudabai’s stepwell.

15th c.

The Vaghela ruler Rana Veersinh begins a stepwell to serve the dry village of Adalaj.

1499

After his death in battle, his widow Queen Rudabai completes the vav in his memory.

Legend

Sultan Mahmud Begada, who invaded the region, is said to have offered to finish it — a tale that ends, by legend, in Rudabai's sacrifice.

Today

An ASI-protected monument and one of Gujarat's finest surviving stepwells.

WHY VISIT

Reasons to make the time

🧊

Naturally cool

Even at the height of summer, the lower storeys stay several degrees cooler.

🪨

Carving everywhere

Pillars, niches and panels worked with flowers, dancers and daily life.

🏛️

Rare engineering

A five-storey octagonal well that doubled as a temple and rest-house.

💔

A famous legend

The story of Queen Rudabai gives the place its haunting reputation.

📷

Dramatic light

Shafts of sun falling through the storeys make for striking photographs.

🚗

Easy from the city

An easy half-day trip, on the way to or from Gandhinagar.

HIGHLIGHTS

What to look for inside

THE DESCENT

Five carved storeys

Steps and galleries falling into cool shade.

THE WELL

The octagonal shaft

Light filtering down to the water below.

THINGS TO DO

How to spend an hour or two

01

Descend slowly

Take the steps storey by storey and feel the air cool as you go down.

02

Read the carvings

Look for flowers, elephants, dancers and scenes of everyday village life.

03

Find the shrines

Small carved niches along the descent once offered a moment of prayer.

04

Stand at the octagon

The eight-sided landing over the well is the most atmospheric spot.

05

Hear the legend

Ask about Queen Rudabai and Mahmud Begada — the well's famous, tragic tale.

06

Photograph the light

Wait for a sunbeam to drop through the storeys for the classic shot.

Pillared landings step down to the water.

ARCHITECTURE & SETTING

A temple turned on its head, underground

Adalaj is a five-storey ‘vav’ — a subterranean stepwell that descends through a series of pillared pavilions to a deep octagonal well shaft. Three stepped entrances meet at the first underground landing, an unusual plan that floods the upper levels with light while keeping the depths cool and shaded.

The stone is densely carved in an Indo-Islamic blend: floral and geometric bands sit beside figures of dancers, musicians and animals, with small shrines set into the walls. Built without mortar, the whole structure relies on the precise fit of its carved blocks — engineering and devotion in a single descent.

Five storeys below ground

Octagonal well shaft

Three stepped entrances

Indo-Islamic carved panels

BEST TIME TO VISIT

When to go

WINTERNov – Feb★★★★★

Cool and bright — the most pleasant time to be out across Ahmedabad.

MONSOONJul – Sep★★★★☆

The city greens up and the heat breaks with brief, refreshing showers.

SUMMERMar – Jun★★★☆☆

Hot and dry, often 40°C+. Best enjoyed early morning or after sunset.

⏰ Come mid-morning, when the sun drops cleanly through the storeys and lights the carvings far below.

PLANNING ESSENTIALS

Timings & entry

🕗OPENING HOURS6 AM – 6 PM
  • Open every day, sunrise to sunset
  • Wear shoes with grip — steps can be smooth
  • The lower levels are dim; tread carefully
  • Allow 45–60 minutes for the full descent
🎟️ENTRYFree / nominal
  • Free for Indian visitors; a small fee for foreign nationals
  • An ASI-protected monument
  • Do not touch or climb on the carvings
  • No food or littering inside the well
HOW TO REACH

Getting there

✈️

By Air

SVP International Airport is about 14 km south — roughly a 30-minute drive.

🚆

By Rail

Ahmedabad Junction is around 18 km; cabs and autos make the trip easily.

🚗

By Road

Just off the Ahmedabad–Gandhinagar highway, with parking at the gate.

NEARBY DISTANCES
Gandhinagar — 12 km · Airport — 14 km · Sabarmati Ashram — 16 km · Ahmedabad centre — 18 km
PHOTOGRAPHY GUIDE

Shooting the stepwell

LIGHT IN THE DEPTHS

Sunbeams, carved storeys and deep cool shadow

🌤️

Best light

Mid-morning sends a clean shaft of light down through the open storeys.

🪜

What to shoot

The descending steps, the octagonal shaft and the carved pillars and niches.

🔦

Mind the dark

Lower levels are dim — a steady hand or fast lens helps without flash.

🧍

Add scale

A single figure on the steps shows just how deep the well really goes.

TRAVEL TIPS

Know before you go

1Wear shoes with good grip; the steps can be slippery.
2Go mid-morning for the best light down the shaft.
3Carry a little water, but don't eat inside the monument.
4It's an easy half-day trip, often combined with Gandhinagar.
5Watch your footing on the lower, dimmer levels.
6Don't touch or climb on the fragile carvings.
NEARBY FOOD

Where to eat around the ashram

STREET FOOD

Manek Chowk

By night the old jewellers' square turns into a buzzing street-food bazaar.

SNACKS

Law Garden Khau Galli

An evening lane of carts serving Gujarati chaat, sandwiches and sweets.

CLASSICS

Old City stalls

Fresh fafda-jalebi, dabeli and khaman in the lanes of the walled city.

🍽️GOOD TO KNOW

A vegetarian city

Ahmedabad is famously veg-friendly — expect superb thalis and farsan.

FREQUENTLY ASKED

Adalaj Stepwell FAQ

Where is Adalaj Stepwell?

In Adalaj village, about 18 km north of Ahmedabad, near Gandhinagar.

Who built it?

Queen Rudabai completed it in 1499, in memory of her husband Rana Veersinh.

What are the timings?

It's open daily from 6 AM to 6 PM.

Is there an entry fee?

It's free for Indian visitors; foreign nationals pay a small ASI fee.

How deep is the stepwell?

It descends five storeys underground to the well shaft.

How long does a visit take?

About 45 to 60 minutes to explore the full descent.

Is it suitable for elderly visitors?

The steps are steep and can be smooth; take care and hold the rails where present.

What is the legend of Adalaj?

A tale of Queen Rudabai, the invader Mahmud Begada and a promise that ended in tragedy.

How do I get there?

It's just off the Ahmedabad–Gandhinagar highway, about a 30-minute drive with parking at the gate.

Can I photograph inside?

Yes; mid-morning light through the storeys gives the best shots.

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