What the museum will showcase
The Museum of Royal Kingdoms of India will be built on a five-acre site close to the Statue of Unity in Ekta Nagar and will host four thematic galleries featuring regal artefacts, textiles, manuscripts, paintings and archival material from erstwhile princely states. The project aims to combine traditional collections with modern digital installations and interactive learning zones.

Design and visitor experience

Architectural plans emphasise harmony with the landscape: courtyards, water bodies and royal-garden inspired landscaping will lead visitors into the museum. A dedicated experiential learning gallery echoing principles of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 will provide hands-on exhibits for students and families.
Visitors will also be able to use a panoramic viewing deck that looks out to the Statue of Unity and the Narmada River, and relax at a museum café serving themed royal cuisine.
Four thematic galleries a quick guide
- Orientation Gallery: Films and audio-visual narratives introducing royal lineages and the museum’s mission.
- The Throne and the State: Exhibits on governance, welfare traditions, and the cultures of royal households.
- The Story of India’s Integration: Documents and displays tracing the Instrument of Accession and the political integration of princely states after 1947.
- Hall of Unity: Symbols, insignias and mementos of princely states, curated to honour contributions to national unity.
The consolidation of over 550 princely states into the Indian Union remains a defining chapter of post-Independence statecraft; the museum will aim to contextualise that achievement for younger audiences.
Why it matters
Beyond showcasing artefacts, the museum is pitched as a national repository and research centre to preserve archival material and enable scholarly study of princely administrations, patronage systems and cultural contributions. Supporters say the museum will deepen public understanding of how diverse regional polities helped shape modern India.
Project cost and local context
The project is estimated at around ₹367 crore and is part of a wider slate of projects inaugurated or laid down at Ekta Nagar on the same day as Rashtriya Ekta Diwas celebrations and commemorations marking Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s 150th birth anniversary. Officials expect the museum to strengthen cultural tourism at the Statue of Unity complex.
