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The
Chittaranjan Palace, built for Mysore's princesses, has been lovingly
restored as a small hotel. In extensive gardens, with formal lawns and
shaded pergolas, and fringed by majestic trees, the hotel is an oasis
of calm. It has been renovated and furnished using traditional Indian
crafts. It offers comfortable surroundings, friendly staff, and a
restful, creative atmosphere. Guests have come for a night and stayed
for a month!
The
Green Hotel has been set up as a model of sustainable tourism, by a UK
charity. All profits are distributed to charitable and environmental
projects in India.
Mysore,
the charming town immortalised by RK Narayan in his Malgudi novels,
provides an excellent base from which to tour South India. The Western
Ghats, the coffee plantations of Coorg, the game reserves of the
Nilgris and the Ooty hill station are all within a few hours drive.
The Chittaranjan Palace, built for Mysore's
princesses, has been lovingly restored as a small hotel. In extensive
gardens, with formal lawns and shaded pergolas, and fringed by
majestic trees, the hotel is an oasis of calm. It has been renovated
and furnished using traditional Indian crafts. It offers comfortable
surroundings, friendly staff, and a restful, creative atmosphere.
Guests have come for a night and stayed for a month!
The
Green Hotel has been set up as a model of sustainable tourism, by a UK
charity. All profits are distributed to charitable and environmental
projects in India.
About
the Green Hotel
"Giving
Green a good name. An interesting spin on Green Tourism comes with the
opening in Mysore, India, of the Green Hotel ... apart from the
expected commitment to energy saving devices and the use of local
produce, the hotel has an equal opportunities policy - particularly
employing widows and abandoned wives, for whom work is usually
unavailable."
- Sunday Times (UK), 23rd July, 1995
The
Green Hotel has been set up as a model of sustainable tourism:
- to
preserve a historic building
- to
incorporate, wherever possible, energy saving and environmentally
aware practices
- to
use Indian craft items in furnishing, equipment and restoration
- to
be a good employer, offering equal and fair opportunities
- to
train staff and develop their potential
- to
provide visitors with the opportunity to enjoy traditional
hospitality rather than modern day uniformity.
All
profits are distributed to charitable and environmental projects in
India.
"The
Chittaranjan Green Hotel ... a place which gives pleasure to the mind
..."
- The Star of Mysore, April 1995
The
hotel has been selected as one of the "World's Best Ideas"
by the Institute of Social Inventions, London. The hotel has won first
prizes in the Mysore Horticultural Society's best garden competition,
and has recieved an award in the British Guild of Travel Writers
Tourism Project. We have also featured in the Green Hotelier Magazine
and on BBC World Service television.

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