

Full Address with Door Number is must for Rental advertisement. Each advertisement of Real Estate and Rental must relate to only one house / flat. 500 (upto 30 words) Bold Rs Ashok Nagar - K.K. Nagar Edition SPECIAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Classified Advertisements under the heads Accommodation Required, Old Age Home, Marriage hall, Mini Hall, Real Estate (Buying & Selling) and Rental will be published on this page. Nagar edition of Mambalam Times can be accessed in FREEĢ MAMBALAM TIMES: Ashok Nagar - K.K. Nagar Health Post, 56th Street, Vijayaraghavapuram. Corporation Middle School, Erikkarai Street, Nesapakkam. Pillayar Koil Street, Khan Nagar, Nesapakkam.

Nagar Health Post, Lake View Road, Nesapakkam. ICDS, 361, 13, Vivekanandar Street, West K. Nagar Yokesh Flats, 28, East Vanniar Street, West K. Corporation Division Office, 10th Sector. Mathias Church (Kamarajar Salai), CSI Church (100 Feet Road). LAB 22, 8th Street Mobile centers: Udayam Bus-stop, St. Corporation Dispensary, 62nd Street, Nallan Kuppam. Corporation School, 83rd Street, Kanniappa Nagar. Corporation Gymnastic Center, 22nd Street. ICDS, 87th Street Government Girls Higher Secondary School, 53rd Street. Nagar: ASHOK NAGAR Health Post 34, 35th Street. The vaccine will be administered at the following centers in Ashok Nagar and K. He said that the vaccine can be administered to children even if they had been given oral drops in recent past. The quality of oral vaccination has been certified by the World Health Organisation and it would not cause any side effects. Sick children, including 22 under the Pulse polio those affected by diarrhea, can also be administrated the polio drops. Children under 5 should be The second phase of oral polio vaccine for the year will immunized irrespective of be administered to children their previous immunization below 5 years on Sunday, Feb. 33 Pulse polio immunization drive today immunization program. To test your bravery, visit the American International Rattlesnake Museum.1 MAMBALAM TIMES ASHOK NAGAR - K.K. Fans of Southwestern jewelry will enjoy the Turquoise Museum, where visitors can experience the depths of a turquoise mine and view rare and spectacular turquoise specimens from all over the world. At Explora, kids of all ages will be amazed by more than 250 interactive science, technology and art exhibits. The museum's planetarium is world-class, and the DynaTheater has been completely renovated to offer visitors a state-of-the-art digital 3D experience. This innovative and hands-on museum explores botany, geology, computer science and paleontology (dinosaurs!). Across the street, the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science stands out with the prominent dome of its planetarium. Just off the plaza, the Albuquerque Museum of Art and History showcases the cultural heritage of New Mexico through its vast collections the museum also features traveling exhibitions. To learn more about the region's history and culture, you can visit some of Old Town's museums. Despite centuries of change, Old Town has retained its charming, walkable character. The arrival of the railroad in 1880 brought new architectural styles, and you will find numerous Victorian buildings that house shops, offices and bed and breakfasts. These traditional buildings have flat roofs and stuccoed walls with rounded edges, and their ceilings are supported with heavy wooden beams called vigas.

Most of the architecture in Old Town is adobe, in the Pueblo-Spanish style. As you wander around the neighborhood, you may see couples posing for wedding pictures in the plaza's gazebo. San Felipe de Neri remains a functioning Catholic church. Today this adobe church, with walls that are five feet thick, is the oldest in Albuquerque its white towers mark Old Town from a distance. When the original adobe church collapsed after the long, rainy summer of 1792, the townspeople rebuilt, and in 1793 the San Felipe de Neri Church was completed. The settlers organized their new town in the traditional Spanish colonial way, with a central plaza anchored by a church. Old Town was established in 1706, when a group of Spanish families settled here, not far from the Rio Grande. More than 300 years after its founding, it remains a center for culture, architecture, shopping, art and cuisine. Old Town was Albuquerque's first neighborhood.
