India's largest wooden palace: The 400-year-old secret hidden in Tamil Nadu

India's largest wooden palace: The 400-year-old secret hidden in Tamil Nadu

Padmanabhapuram Palace, India's largest wooden palace, hides secret tunnels, 400-year-old murals and a mysterious glossy black floor. Here's why every traveller should visit.

Business Today Desk
  • Jun 26, 2026,
  • Updated Jun 26, 2026 3:59 PM IST
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Hidden near the very southern tip of India sits a breathtaking royal residence that genuinely feels caught in a time warp — Padmanabhapuram Palace, with secret underground passages, 400-year-old murals, and ceilings bursting with intricate woodwork. (Pictures: Wikimedia Commons)

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The estate dates back to 1601 as the seat of the Venad kingdom. By 1750, Maharaja Marthanda Varma dedicated his kingdom to Lord Padmanabha, renaming the capital Padmanabhapuram — "the abode of Lord Padmanabha."

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Amongst the palace's architectural wonders, its glossy black floors remain the biggest puzzle. Historians believe craftsmen used charcoal, lime, burnt coconut shells and plant saps — but the exact recipe was never written down.

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The Queen Mother's Palace, or Thai Kottaram, is the property's most ancient section, featuring exquisite woodwork around a classic courtyard — and a hidden underground tunnel once used as an emergency escape route for fleeing royals.

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The Mantrasala, or King's Council Chamber, was engineered to stay naturally cool no matter how blistering the heat outside — intricately slotted wooden windows let breeze flow through while blocking the glaring sun.

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The Grand Dining Hall, locally called Valiya Oottupura, highlights the wealth and generosity of the Travancore kings. Historical records show thousands of guests were fed here during major royal occasions.

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Right by the main entrance stands a centuries-old mechanical clock tower that incredibly still works today — guiding generations of visitors and easily ranking among the palace's most fascinating quirks.

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