The Moazzam Jahi Market is constructed primarily from locally quarried granite and arranged around a triangular layout with a central courtyard. Its design features arched corridors, colonnaded verandahs, and a large central dome that dominates the skyline. The building’s stone masonry and restrained ornamentation were intended to create both durability and visual harmony with Hyderabad’s surrounding civic structures built in the early 20th century. The market exemplifies the “CIB” or “Osmanian” architectural style, a distinctive idiom developed by the City Improvement Board (CIB) during the reign of
Mir Osman Ali Khan. This style sought to project a sense of modernity and secularism while drawing inspiration from earlier regional forms, including
Kakatiya temple architecture,
Qutb Shahi arches and domes, Mughal decorative motifs, and
Asaf Jahi proportions. The result is a blend of
Indo-Islamic and local Deccani influences expressed through robust stonework and balanced symmetry, making the market one of the finest surviving examples of Osmanian civic architecture in Hyderabad. ==See also==