Sunday, May 19, 2013

Altit Fort, Hunza Valley


Altit Fort is situated in the village of Altit, about 3 km from Karimabad. It has been built on a sheer rock-cliff that falls 300 meters (1000 feet) into the Hunza River, and is much older than the Baltit Fort.

View of Altit fort, with the central town to the right and below the fort. The extreme gullies, sharp drop-off, and location high above the river made this settlement highly defensible and an older settlement than many in the central valley.


The majestic historical Altit fort is center of attraction due to its architectural design and strategic location. Altit is the birth place of the Hunza Kingdom and Altit fort is the first fort of the region. The fort has been constructed in six different stages by using various natural levels of the rock. The construction has been made right on the edge of a sheer rock cliff that drops 1000 feet straight down to the Hunza River.

In the beginning it was built as a palace, soon after the addition of the watch tower a defensive architectural element it transformed to a fort. There is great possibility that different stages of the fort have been constructed during different times because the actual age of the fort is said to be more than 800 years. This fort is said to be around 50-100 years older than the Baltit Fort.

HUNZA, Oct 1: An ancient house in Hunza has received the Unesco’s Heritage Award for 2009. Ali Gohar House, a 400-year-old architectural masterpiece, formerly used by envoy of Mir of Hunza to Kashgar, Sinkiang, was selected by a panel of international conservation experts in architecture, urban planning, heritage conservation and landscape design from among the 52 entries from 14 Asia-Pacific countries, including Australia, China, India, Korea, Vietnam, New Zealand and Thailand. The historic house has been restored by the Aga Khan Cultural Service.

The award distribution ceremony is expected to take place in the first quarter of 2010 at Ganish, Hunza, and will be attended by the representatives of Unesco, ministries of Culture and Tourism, community and foreign embassies.

Being involved in the rehabilitation of Ganish old settlements since 1998, the Aga Khan Cultural Service, Pakistan on the request of the Ganish Khun Heritage Care and Social Welfare Society (GKHC & SWS), initiated the physical conservation of the house in 2004. ‘Reusability’ being the core component for restoration, Ali Gohar House was intended to be used as a community centre, providing working space to the Ganish society, encouraging women to congregate and work, and to be a centre for arts, crafts and documentation of Ganish culture in consultation with the community. The House has now been leased by the owner to the community, setting a strong example of community based management system.

During the restoration, AKCS-P ensured minimising the appearance and unseen presence of all modern elements. The insertions needed for the adaptive reuse were designed in such a way that it permits, if necessary, their removal or alteration in future without damaging the adjacent original fabric. Minor modern materials such as the addition of basic electric and plumbing services were part of the new material incorporated in the historic building’s fabric. All such insertion were undertaken to retain authenticity and integrity of the original house. During the whole process, three missing historic wooden stairs were replaced by new ones to meet modern safety standards, whereas the rest of the house remains in its original form.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/general-images-multimedia/51449-altit-fort-hunza.html#ixzz2TrzH3NkI

Comparison of Gilgit-Baltistan and Switzerland's beauty and the the contrast in the rate of tourist inflow

Comparison of Gilgit-Baltistan and Switzerland's beauty and the the contrast in the rate of tourist inflow

K2 Peak at Shigar Baltistan

K2 Peak at Shigar Baltistan......The 2nd Highest peak in the World...K2 (also known as ChhogoriQogir, KetuKechu, Savage Mountain, Mountaineer's Mountain or Mount Godwin-Austen) is the second-highest mountain on Earth, after Mount Everest. With a peak elevation of 8,611 m (28,251 feet), K2 is part of the Karakoram Range, and is located at Shigar Baltistan Pakistan.

Mount Everest scaled by Ist Pakistani Woma



 First Pakistani woman 22 year old Samina Baig of Shamshal Valley, Gilgit firmly planted Pakistan's National flag on the Mount Everest summit. Her brother Ali Baig 29 years accompanied her and is champion of gender equality. He calls it First Pakistani Gender Equality Mt.Everest (8848m) Expedition "First Pakistani Gender Equality Mt.Everest (8848m) Expedition" It is the mission of Mt.Everest Expedition to embark the FIRST female Pakistani on any 8000er summit. Samina & Mirza are the only Pakistani who carried togather Pakistan´s National Flag to Mt.Everst on the 60th anniversary of its first ascent back in 1953. A mountain climbing venture of a Pakistani brother & sister. Mirza has been climbing for last 12 years and wokrs as a mountain guide, expedition leader and trainer in the Karakorum, Himalaya and Hindukush. Samina Baig is a student of arts and has been climbing since four years. Her goal is to turn her love for mountaineering into her profession and work as a tour leader and mountain guide in the near future. Samina is the first pakistani female to attempt any 8000er mountain. Especially Mt. Everest, the highest peak of them all, has been summited only by two Pakistani mountaineers: Mr. Nazir Sabir & Mr. Hassan Sadpara. Samina became the first Pakistani female to summit Mt.Evererest. For all Pakistanis it is a day to celebrate with Samina and Ali

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Junction Point Of 3 HIGHTS MOUNTAIN Range of World.

It is located on the junction of three mighty mountain ranges, the Kurrakuram, Hindukush and Himalayas. It is also a junction point between Skardu and Gilgit. 

The road to Skardu branches off about six kilometers towards Gilgit. Juglot is strategically important since the olden times as it lay along the old route linking the British India to China via Kashmir.

Baltoro Glacier Gilgit Baltistan Pakistan.

~Baltoro Glacier~

The Baltoro Glacier, at 62 kilometers long, is one of the longest glaciers outside the polar regions.[1] It is located in Baltistan, in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan, and runs through part of the Karakoram mountain range. The Baltoro Muztagh lies to the north and east of the glacier, while the Masherbrum Mountains lie to the south. At 8,611 m (28,251 ft), K2 is the highest mountain in the region, and three others within 20 km top 8,000 m.

The glacier gives rise to the Shigar River, which is a tributary of the Indus River. Several large tributary glaciers feed the main Baltoro glacier, including the Godwin Austen Glacier, flowing south from K2; the Abruzzi and the various Gasherbrum Glaciers, flowing from the Gasherbrum group of peaks; the Vigne Glacier, flowing from Chogolisa, and the Yermandendu Glacier, flowing from Masherbrum. The confluence of the main Baltoro Glacier with the Godwin Austen Glacier is known as Concordia; this location and K2 base camp are popular trekking destinations.

The trough of this glacier is very wide. Small valley glaciers form icefalls where they meet the trunk glacier. The sidewalls vary from very steep to precipitous. The glacier has carved striations on the surrounding country rocks. Moving ice has formed depressions, which serve as basins for numerous glacial lakes.

The glacier can be approached via the important Balti town of Skardu

Legacy+Technology


Legacy+Technology