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Restoring Original Names for Roads and Streets in Lahore

Tuesday, May 19, 2026
5 min read
Restoring Original Names for Roads and Streets in Lahore

The government in Punjab finally gave the Green light. It approved the plan to bring back the original names for many roads and streets in Lahore. That’s what an official said on Monday, according to PTI.

It’s about reviving the old city’s heritage, really. For decades, names kept changing. Streets and alleys in Lahore got new names. They swapped out the original British-era or Hindu-associated names for Islamic ones or local figures.

A Punjab government official put it this way when speaking to PTI. He said the Punjab Cabinet meeting, chaired by Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, a few days ago, actually approved this move. They approved restoring the original and historical names for streets and roads around Lahore.

The government said they did this to revive the city’s cultural identity. To bring back the history.

This whole initiative, they said, is being led by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. He’s running the Lahore Heritage Areas Revival project. The cabinet actually gave the final nod to his proposal last week.

You see the list of places they are talking about. Queen’s Road. Jail Road. Davies Road. Lawrence Road. Empress Road. Krishan Nagar. Santnagar. Dharampura. Brandreth Road. Ram Gali. Tempbell Street. Laxmi Chowk. Jain Mandir Road. Kumharpura. Mohan Lal Bazaar. Sundar Das Road. Bhagwan Pura. Shanti Nagar. And Outfall Road.

It’s a long list.

Sharif also proposed restoring a traditional ‘akhara’—a wrestling arena—and three cricket grounds right at Minto Park, Greater Iqbal Park. It feels like a damage control move, you know? A way to manage the fallout.

This connects to the background, the history there. Shehbaz Sharif, Nawaz Sharif’s brother, had faced serious backlash back when he was chief minister in 2015. He had demolished some historical cricket grounds and areas tied to cricket clubs. Plus a wrestling arena. All to make way for some urban development.

Cricketers, like Inzamam-ul-Haq, got their training in those cricket clubs at Minto Park. It’s a strange timeline, really.

Before Partition, things at Minto Park were different. Lala Amarnath, an Indian cricketer, traveled to Lahore then. He got training there. He visited Minto Park and spent time with the Crescent Cricket Club players. He played for that club until the Partition happened.

The wrestling arena itself has history too. It saw bouts by old-timers like Goonga Pehalwan, Imam Bakhsh, and Gama Pehalwan. Even before Partition, Minto Park celebrated Dussehra. A Hindu festival.

So you have this big push for street names. And then you have this older layer of history at Minto Park. It’s all tangled up. A lot of history being pulled and re-stitched.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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