Gates s'' at the Shaniwar wada. Shaniwar Wada has five gates: •
Jambhul Darwaza or
Narayan Darwaja (Narayan's Gate), facing south :This gate was used by concubines to enter and leave the fort. It obtained its second name after
Narayanrao Peshwa's corpse was removed from the fort for cremation through this gate.
Palaces The important buildings in the palace includes the
Thorlya Rayancha Diwankhana (Marathi: the court reception hall of the eldest royal, meaning Baji Rao I),
Naachacha Diwankhana (Dance Hall), and
Juna Arsa Mahal (Old Mirror Hall). Since the buildings were destroyed in the fire of 1828, only descriptions of the living areas of the fort are available. All the state halls in the buildings are said to have doorways with exquisitely carved teak arches, with ornamental teardrop teak pillars shaped like
Suru (
cypress tree) trunks supporting the ceilings, which were covered with beautiful teak tracery, carved creepers and flowers. Exquisite glass chandeliers hung from the ceilings. The floors were made of highly polished
marble, arranged in a
mosaic pattern and adorned with rich
Persian rugs. The walls contained paintings with scenes from the
Hindu epics, the
Ramayana and the
Mahabharata. The buildings are said to have been designed and constructed by well-known artisans, including Shivaram Krishna Khasgiwale, Devaji Sutar, Kondaji Sutar, Morarji Patharwat Bhojraja (an inlay-work expert from
Jaipur) and Ragho (a painter). It is said that the Shaniwarwada complex was seven storeys high. On the top floor was the residence of the Peshwa which was called Meghadambari. It is said that the spire of
Jñāneśvar temple at
Alandi, 17 km away, could be seen from there.
The Fountain The complex had an impressive
lotus-shaped fountain: the
Hazari Karanje (Fountain of a thousand jets). It was constructed for the pleasure of the infant
Peshwa Sawai Madhavrao. It was designed as a sixteen petal lotus; each petal had sixteen jets with an eighty-foot arch. It was the most complicated and intricate fountain of its time. Shrimant Anandrao Rudrajirao Dhulap-More (an admiral of
Maratha navy in 18th century) who visited the Shaniwarwada in 1791 described it as "very magnificent. A hundred dancers can dance here at a time. In one corner is a marble
Ganapati statue and the palace is flanked by a fountain and a flower garden.". ==Popular culture==