LOCATION :
25 kms. from Airport.
ACCOMMODATION :
225, Single: 166, Double: 16, Suite: 31.
ROOM FACILITIES :
24 hr Room Service, Hot & Cold Running Water, Telephone, TV, Hair Dryer,
Mini Bar.
OTHER FACILITIES :
Shopping Arcade, Baby Sitting, Health Club, Outside Pool.
ADDRESS :
Taj Bengal, 34B, Belvedre Road, Alipore, Calcutta - 700 027.
Click here
to Book Hotel Taj Bengal
Hotel The Oberoi Grand, Kolkata
LOCATION :
24 kms. from Airport, 5 kms. from Railway Station.
ACCOMMODATION :
Total: 213, Double: 207, Suite: 6.
ROOM FACILITIES :
Business Centre, Banquet & Conference Facilities, Beauty Parlour, Shopping
Arcade, Health Club, Swimming Pool.
OTHER FACILITIES :
Banquet & Conference facilites, Beauty Parlour, Shopping Arcade, Health
Club, Swimming Pool.
ADDRESS :
The Oberoi Grand, 15, Jawahar Lal Nehru Road, Calcutta- 700 013
Click here
to Book Hotel The Oberoi Grand
Calcutta retains much of the splendour of yesteryears, with a presence that
is at once regal, imposing and memorable, a city worthy of admiration and love.
Welcome to Job Charnock's 'chance-directed, chance-erected city, Lapierre's
City of Joy'. Calcutta was born in August 1690, following the midday halt of
Job Charnock, Chief of the British East India Company, on the eastern banks
of the River Hooghly, overlooking the bustling village of Sutanati. The city
grew around Sutanati and the adjoining villages of Govindapur and Kalikata (site
of the famous Kali Temple ), from which is derived its present name.
Charnock's halt ws, however, no accident. Fifty years earlier, Mughal Emperor
Shah Jehan had granted a concession of free trade in Bengal to an English surgeon,
Gabriel Boughton, as fee for effecting a royal cure.Over the next 250 years,
Calcutta grew into the leading city east of Suez, and the second city of the
British Empire.
Inextricably interwoven into its history are River Hooghly and the port (Kidderpore
Docks), both witness to the eventful and fast changing mulieu of the city. Calcutta's
growth was further enhanced by a hinterland rich in coal, iron ore and mineral
deposits, and as the focal point for the tea, jute and engineering industries.
Today, Calcutta is India's largest metropolis, with a population in excess of
11 million.