Mulpani, Kathmandu

Mulpani is a village and former Village Development Committee that is now part of Kageshwari-Manohara Municipality in Kathmandu District in Province No. 3 of central Nepal. Mulpani was previously known as Bhaimal, meaning "no fear". At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 4718 and had 843 households in it. The main occupation of the people living in this village is agriculture. Mulpani is surrounded by Bagmati and Manohara river. Mulpani is famous for the Nepal's biggest International Cricket Ground, known as Mulpani Cricket Stadium, which is under construction. In the recent years, Mulpani has seen much change in its infrastructure and people as well. The main occupation in Mulpani was agriculture but now employment is more diverse.

Mulpani, Kathmandu

मुलपानी

Sunthanetar
Nickname(s): 
Bhaimal
Motto(s): 
"Hamro Mulpani, Ramro Mulpani"
Mulpani, Kathmandu
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 27.71°N 85.40°E / 27.71; 85.40
Country   Nepal
ProvinceNo. 3
DistrictKathmandu
Government
  TypeCommunist
  Ward ChairmanPrakash Phuyal
Population
 (2011)[1]
  Total4,718
 11742
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)

Mulpani has raised its standards of development by youth clubs like Chakhandol Youth Club on the western side and Jhulchowk Youth Unity Club (JYUC), Manohara Mulpani Youth Club, Friends Club®, Nabintam Youth Club® and Manohara Sports Club (MASPOC) on the Eastern side.

Well known places, streets and travel destinations around Mulpani

gollark: Wait, you do geology as one of your core science things? Weird.
gollark: So just anti-new-things indoctrination, how wonderful.
gollark: The closest thing to ethics we did was philosophy for something like six hours a year due to weird timetabling, which actually was pretty good.
gollark: Oh dear.
gollark: Well, that sounds... worryingly authoritarian, especially for a literature book.

References

  1. "National Population and Housing Census 2011(Village Development Committee/Municipality)" (PDF). Government of Nepal. National Planning Commission. November 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-10-05. Retrieved 2017-01-07.


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