In a transformative pivot from colonial legacies to civilizational pride, India's historic North and South Blocks on Raisina Hill are shedding their administrative mantle to birth the Yuge Yugeen Bharat Museum, poised to claim the title of the world's largest museum.
Spanning 1.55 lakh square meters (with over 80,000 sqm of display space across 950 rooms), this behemoth will chronicle 5,000 years of Bharat's journey, from Indus Valley seals to modern manuscripts. The first gallery is expected to open in the North Block by late 2026, featuring 30 thematic spaces over three years and showcasing 80,000–1 lakh artefacts sourced from national vaults, state collections, and ASI treasures.
Culture Secretary Vivek Aggarwal revealed to The Times of India: the inaugural "Time and Timelessness" gallery will spotlight 100 pivotal relics – think Indus Valley terracotta hourglasses (2500–1750 BCE), Mauryan edict pillars (3rd century BCE), Gupta Surya sculptures (5th century CE), the iconic 13th-century Konark Sun Wheel, and Chola Nataraja bronzes (10th–11th century CE) – offering a philosophical portal into India's eternal ethos.
Colonial Bastions Reborn: North-South Blocks' Historic Shift
Once the nerve center of British Viceregal power and post-Independence governance, these Edwin Lutyens-designed edifices witnessed the scars of Partition, Emergency deliberations, and triumphs such as the GST rollout, the abrogation of Article 370, and Swachh Bharat. For 95 years, South Block housed the PMO under 16 leaders from Nehru to Modi; Cabinet meetings echoed here until February 2026's poignant finale.
PM Modi's February 13 dedication of the new PMO, rechristened 'Seva Teerth', alongside 'Kartavya Bhavans' signaled the epochal change. Ministries like Home, Finance, Personnel, External Affairs, and CBI have relocated to these tech-savvy, green workspaces on Kartavya Path, freeing the blocks for "adaptive reuse." The Union Cabinet hailed it as a leap from "power-centric" rule to "service-oriented" Viksit Bharat, preserving architecture while infusing modern museology.
Thematic Tapestry: 5,000 Years in 30 Galleries
Curated across eight zones, the museum weaves politics, art, spirituality, and innovation:
- Ancient Foundations: Indus artefacts from Kalibangan, Harappan seals.
- Classical Glory: Mauryan edicts, Gupta gold coins, Ajanta murals.
- Medieval Majesty: Chola bronzes, Vijayanagara scrolls, Mughal miniatures.
- Freedom to Future: INA trials, Constitution drafts, space tech replicas.
Expect immersive audio-visuals, digital holograms, manuscripts, coins, and murals, all from a mapped pool of 20 lakh objects.
Indo-French synergy elevates it: a December 2024 pact with France Museums Development pairs India's heritage with Louvre-caliber expertise. Arcop Associates leads design under Thai architect Kulapat Yantrasast (Louvre redeveloper, LA's Academy Museum), blending adaptive heritage with UNESCO/ICOM standards.
Seamless Spectacle: Engineering Visitor Dreams
Anticipating 10 million annual visitors (50,000 daily), accessibility reigns: ramps for PwD, seamless flows sans Raisina security snarls. A proposed underground tunnel – morphing into a subterranean cultural corridor- will link North-South Blocks, letting explorers glide between eras undetected. Restoration strips post-Independence partitions, reviving Lutyens' grandeur amid sustainable tech. Culture Minister Gajendra Shekhawat eyes first verticals by 2027, eclipsing the Louvre's footprint.
Feature | Yuge Yugeen Bharat | Louvre (Paris) |
Total Area | 1.55 lakh sqm | ~72,735 sqm |
Display Space | 80,000+ sqm | ~40,000 sqm |
Artefacts | 80,000–1 lakh | ~380,000 (38,000 displayed) |
Timeline Span | 5,000 years (Indus–Modern) | 10,000 years (global) |
Galleries | 30 across 8 zones | 35+ departments |
Annual Visitors | Projected 10 million | 9.6 million (2024) |
Tourism Tsunami and Legacy Link
This Central Vista crown jewel joins the PM Museum and digitised Archives, amplifying cultural mapping. Replacing Janpath's National Museum, it repositions Delhi as a heritage hub, drawing global gazes to Raisina's reinvention.
As North Block readies its debut, Yuge Yugeen Bharat isn't exhibiting; it's Bharat's soul, timeless and triumphant, inviting generations to reclaim their continuum.












