The National Assembly is located next to the famous
Darul Aman Palace in
Darulaman, which is the southwestern section of
Kabul where many important national institutions are found. The current Parliament was inaugurated on April 26, 2019, after being sworn in by Ghani. The foundation stone for the new National Assembly Building was laid in August 2005 by the last reigning monarch of Afghanistan,
King Zahir, in the presence of
Hamid Karzai and
Manmohan Singh. India's Central Public Works Department (CPWD) was the consultant for the project and the contract was awarded to an Indian infrastructure company in 2008. The new Parliament building is corralled in a 40-hectare plot in the famous
Darulaman section of Kabul. It sits next to two historical landmarks: the
Darul Aman Palace and the
Tajbeg Palace. The construction work on the $220 million building was initially slated to be complete by 2012, in 36 months. The deadline, however, was pushed back due to challenging work conditions, shortage of skilled workforce and precarious security environment. More than 500 laborers had worked on the building, most of them Indian nationals. The main attraction of the building is a bronze dome of 32 meter diameter and 17.15 meter height is considered to be the largest dome in Asia. The big dome will cover the assembly hall and the small dome will be over the entrance lobby. In front of the building, there is a water body with nine cascading fountains. Inside the building, a 6-meter fountain, made of green marble imported from Indian city of
Udaipur, has been installed. On December 25, 2015, during a state visit of Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, the new Parliament building was inaugurated along with President
Ashraf Ghani. Ghani tweeted: "Pleased to welcome PM Modi to Kabul. Though, India & Afghanistan need no introduction, we are bound by a thousand ties... We have stood by each other in the best and worst of times." ==See also==