Travel
fromTravel + Leisure
2 weeks agoYou Can Now Explore India on 5 New Luxury Train Tours
Luxury train journeys in India offer opulent experiences, showcasing the country's heritage, landscapes, and cuisine without logistical concerns.
According to Hindu mythology, gods and demons churned the ocean to get amrita, the nectar of immortality. A deadly poison called Halahala came out first. The poison was so powerful that it threatened to destroy the entire universe. To save creation, Lord Shiva drank the poison, which turned his throat blue but did not harm him.
The sense of open space of connecting to nature is contested by the building forms that emerge through the prescribed structural codes and densities. The architecture emerges from the site, topography, from the region's material history-black basalt and wood-and adapts to both flexible and fixed-public and private-programs.
High above the Naggar valley in Himachal Pradesh, Eila reveals itself slowly. It is not the kind of resort that announces its presence with grand façades or rigid terraces. Instead, it feels as if the architecture has quietly grown out of the mountainside. Soft, organic forms follow the contours of the land, echoing the rhythms of the terrain rather than resisting them.
Designed by Habitat Architects, the Solan Hill House is a private residence embedded into a sloping site in Himachal Pradesh, conceived as an architecture that grows out of its terrain rather than resting on it. Completed as a response to complex gradients, access conditions, and visual exposure, the project uses the landscape itself as a generator of form, structure, and spatial sequence.
A February vacation can be the right time to explore different parts of the country. Whether solo or with loved ones, February is a sweet spot for travel. It also means fewer crowds, better deals, and pleasant weather in many destinations. So, if you are planning a getaway, here's a list of some of the best places to visit in February in India.
Standing among the Alps, it's easy to believe that they will last forever. They seem too big to fail, too old to change. This illusion of permanence has long entranced travelers who have visited to experience the intoxicating feeling of being daunted and dwarfed by a landscape's authority. But even mountains move: This past May an avalanche of ice and rock tore through the Lötschental Valley, erasing the village of Blatten in less than a minute.