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Discover the Creativity of Waste to Wonder Park in New Delhi

Devesh Gupta

Explore how discarded metal transforms into stunning sculptures at Waste to Wonder Park, a unique experience for all ages.

Right from the entrance, there was a sense of surprise and delight: monuments I knew from pictures, but re-imagined in scrap, bolts, car parts, rods. Zoey's eyes widened at the sight of the Eiffel Tower replica towering over us, made of heavy automobile waste. Aarti whispered, "Look, it's Paris!" as she ran ahead to see the Statue of Liberty, its torch up high, metal sheets forming its folds. Margret and I felt proud: here was creativity, sustainability, and play — all in one place.


The Seven Wonders & The Metal Magic

Waste to Wonder Park spans ~5-7 acres and was created by the South Delhi Municipal Corporation. It utilizes about 150 tonnes of industrial and metal waste, including old fans, rods, pipes, broken bikes and automobile parts, nuts and bolts, railings, and more.


The park has 25 life-size or large replicas of the Seven Wonders of the World and different Dinosaurs, each with its own character:

  • The Eiffel Tower (≈ 60 ft high) was made from automobile scrap.

  • The Statue of Liberty (≈ 35 ft) was crafted from old pipes, benches, metal sheets, and other materials.

  • Christ the Redeemer (Rio) at about 25 ft.

  • Colosseum of Rome (≈ 15-16½ ft), built from materials such as electric poles and car wheels.

  • The Great Pyramid of Giza, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and the Taj Mahal are featured in similar scrap reconstructions. Each sculpture had its own texture: perforated metal, welded rods, mesh-like sheets so light peeked through; sometimes rough patched metal edges gave a beautiful imperfection.


Dinosaurs, Slides & Sounds

One of the best surprises was the mini Dinosaur Park, located either inside or adjacent to the main park. For the girls, this was magic: life-size and movable dinosaur structures. They roared (in mechanical sounds) or crept, turning heads. Zoey reached up to touch scaly metal skin on a Velociraptor, while Aarti scrambled up a slide shaped like a dinosaur's back. The slide, toy train ride, and “dinosaur voices” brought out shrieks, giggles, and sudden screams of playful fright — the kind of moment I know I’ll remember: Zoey clutching my hand, her face both brave and amazed.


Practical Details & Park Info

  • Timings: Generally open from 11:00 AM to 11:00 PM on most days; closed on Monday and national holidays.

  • Entry fee: Adults (age ~12-65): around INR 50; children 3-12 years: ~INR 25; children below 3 years and senior citizens often free.

  • Amenities and access: Parking for cars & two-wheelers; restrooms; seating benches; well-lit pathways, especially attractive in evenings.

  • How to reach: The nearest metro stations are Nizamuddin or Hazrat Nizamuddin, both accessible via the Pink Line. Also accessible by local buses; Sarai Kale Khan ISBT is nearby.


Emotional Currents & Shared Joy

Watching Zoey and Aarti move from wonder to wonder — touching, pointing, posing — I felt a soft swell in my chest. The contrast between cold metal and warm laughter, the way their excitement echoed against the stillness of scrap monuments: it was a lesson in how beauty can arise from what we discard.


Margret smiled when Zoey insisted we climb up to see the top of the Statue of Liberty replica; Aarti held the toy train’s railing tight, trying to balance fear and thrill. I remember thinking: “If these scrap metals could talk, they’d tell stories of journeys, hands that welded them, people who gave them second life.”


Even the mechanical dinosaur roars, though a little too loudly, making the moment real. When Zoey slid down a dino-slide, the wind in her hair, and she laughed so hard she paused at the bottom just to catch her breath — that memory is frozen now in warmth.


Reflections & Takeaway

Waste to Wonder isn’t just a gallery of sculptures; it’s a message: waste becomes wonder, discarded metals become landmarks of global culture, art meets environment meets play. It cost approximately ₹7.5 crore to build, a process that spanned several months and involved artists, welders, helpers, and a vast amount of scrap.


We left the park as dusk crept in, silhouettes glowing under lights, the monuments casting long metal shadows. The girls fell asleep on the way home, faces flushed, hands sticky (from some snack outside), dreams already dancing with images of metal lions, toy trains, and stone-hewn slides.


If you’re planning a visit, consider the following tips: bring kids along; go with someone who loves art or the environment; bring a camera; wear shoes that can handle cold metal; plan for 1-2 hours; and visit later in the afternoon to stay until the evening when the lights come on.


In the End

This park in Delhi, India is a must-visit if you are around. In case you are planning to visit, make sure you are wearing comfortable shoes and have a water bottle with you because the campus is too big. There's an open cafetaria if you feel hungry after the long walk. When in India, you must visit the following places:


Happy traveling!! And don't forget to check out our video here:



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