A rare 42-year-old map of Bengaluru has set social media buzzing after a city resident shared images of the 1983 edition she purchased from a collector.
What immediately caught the attention of Bengalureans was the absence of HSR Layout, the faint mention of Indiranagar, and the striking centrality of Jayanagar on the map.
The woman who shared the map on X wrote, “We bought Bengaluru’s map (1983 edition) from a collector. And it turns out, HSR & Indiranagar are non-existent. Jayanagar is almost central of the city. Now, onto finding our favourite places on the map and see if they existed back then.”
She later clarified that the map was not confined to South Bengaluru, as many initially assumed. It covered the entire city, marking well-known areas such as MG Road, Shivajinagar, Cantonment, Ulsoor Lake, and stretches towards Whitefield, Hebbal, Yelahanka, Tumkur Road, and Bellary Road.
South Bengaluru, however, appeared more developed in the early 1980s, with planned layouts like Jayanagar, Banashankari and JP Nagar already in place, while northern stretches were still semi-rural.
How Bengalureans Reacted Online
The discovery sparked nostalgia, debate, and even humour. One user suggested that the map be scanned and open-sourced in high resolution for research purposes.
Another wryly commented, “This is the map to refer while buying a house. If there was a lake there, don’t buy it.”
Others challenged the claim about Indiranagar’s absence, recalling that the locality was already established in the 1970s with BDA sites, HAL’s influence, and even cricket legend Rahul Dravid growing up there.
Responding to this, the woman acknowledged that Indiranagar does appear, though faintly, in the map’s top-right corner, far less prominent than it is today.
The map has since become more than a curiosity, it has become a reminder of Bengaluru’s rapid transformation from a sleepy, leafy town into the bustling metropolis it is now, where neighbourhoods like HSR Layout and Indiranagar are synonymous with urban living, dining, and nightlife.
What immediately caught the attention of Bengalureans was the absence of HSR Layout, the faint mention of Indiranagar, and the striking centrality of Jayanagar on the map.
The woman who shared the map on X wrote, “We bought Bengaluru’s map (1983 edition) from a collector. And it turns out, HSR & Indiranagar are non-existent. Jayanagar is almost central of the city. Now, onto finding our favourite places on the map and see if they existed back then.”
We bought Bengaluru’s map (1983 edition) from a collector. (42 years old)
— Dravisha (@dravishakatoch) August 30, 2025
And it turns out, HSR & Indiranagar are non existent. Jayanagar is almost central of the city.
Now, onto finding our fav places on the map and see if they existed back then xD pic.twitter.com/NBWlApcELJ
She later clarified that the map was not confined to South Bengaluru, as many initially assumed. It covered the entire city, marking well-known areas such as MG Road, Shivajinagar, Cantonment, Ulsoor Lake, and stretches towards Whitefield, Hebbal, Yelahanka, Tumkur Road, and Bellary Road.
South Bengaluru, however, appeared more developed in the early 1980s, with planned layouts like Jayanagar, Banashankari and JP Nagar already in place, while northern stretches were still semi-rural.
How Bengalureans Reacted Online
The discovery sparked nostalgia, debate, and even humour. One user suggested that the map be scanned and open-sourced in high resolution for research purposes.
Another wryly commented, “This is the map to refer while buying a house. If there was a lake there, don’t buy it.”
Others challenged the claim about Indiranagar’s absence, recalling that the locality was already established in the 1970s with BDA sites, HAL’s influence, and even cricket legend Rahul Dravid growing up there.
Responding to this, the woman acknowledged that Indiranagar does appear, though faintly, in the map’s top-right corner, far less prominent than it is today.
The map has since become more than a curiosity, it has become a reminder of Bengaluru’s rapid transformation from a sleepy, leafy town into the bustling metropolis it is now, where neighbourhoods like HSR Layout and Indiranagar are synonymous with urban living, dining, and nightlife.
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