
The Himalaya is the greatest
mountain system in the world. It stretches 2400 km from east
to west between Nanga Parbat and Namcha Barwa peaks. Most
find such an immense range of mountains hard to envisage because
the scale is beyond one's experience.
Cradled among the mountains in the central
Himalaya with profusion of high peaks lies the Nepal. Of the
fourteen peaks in the world that exceed 8,000 meters no fewer
than eight of them are in Nepal, including Mt. Everest the
highest in the world.
The mystery of the unknown, sheer beauty
of majestic peaks and above all, an urge to experience the
challenge of climbing world's highest mountains have attracted
thousands of climbers to the Himalayan slopes.
The first tentative steps towards Himalayan
climbing were taken in 1920's, and several expedition teams
were able to make important exploration and significant progress
in climbing Mt. Everest, Nanga Parbat, K2, and Kanchenjunga.
However, it was only after the opening of the Nepal Himalaya,
followed by the successful ascents of the first peak over
8000m - Annapurna I by Maurice Herzog and Luis Lachenal in
1950 and Mt. Everest in 1953 by Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and
New Zealander Edmund Hillary, the mountaineering activities
in the Himalaya started to gain wider popularity.
The current work of the IMM project involves
phase one of the project. Works in this phase includes the
construction and completion of the main Museum Hall building
which will house the halls for exhibit display, audio visual
hall and conservation room for exhibits. The Museum Hall building
covers a total floor area of 4242 sq. meters of the total
12.5 acres of the land owned by the Nepal Mountaineering Association
(NMA) for the IMM Project.
There will be two main exhibition halls,
Hall of the Great Himalaya and Hall of World Mountains. These
Halls will have models of famous peaks, mannequins of famous
climbers, equipment and material used in mountaineering, culture
and life style of mountain peoples, flora and fauna including
geologicy.
Address:
International Mountain Museum
Tatapaira, Pokhara-17
Tel: +977-61-525 742
Email: office@nma.com.np,
immpkr@fewamail.com.np
Website: http://www.nma.com.np
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