Nishan-e-Manzil
Nishan-e-Manzil Gujranwala is a famous landmark and a well-known point of interest of this city which is visited by a number of people on daily basis. This beautiful place is situated in Gujranwala Cantonment.
Gujranwala Railway Station
Gujranwala Railway Station is located in Gujranwala city. Gujranwala is the 5th largest city of Pakistan and this junction has a high footfall daily while people travel to different cities of the country.
Liaquat Park
Liaquat Park (Company Bagh) is a park located in Gujranwala which is famous for having a tree that is probably hundreds of years old. It stands in the middle of a large field in the park.
Sheranwala Bagh
The Sheranwala Bagh Baradari is a garden pavilion reportedly built by Mahan Singh, the father of the famous Maharaja Ranjit Singh. It is a classic baradari, which literally means '12 doors' in reference to the three open bays on each side of the structure.
Gulshan Iqbal Park
Gulshan Iqbal Park is one and only park for Gujranwala people who want to enjoy outdoor activities with their families. Children enjoy swings, train ride and other fun-filled activities in the playing area. Situated in the suburban locality of Shaheen Abad G.T. Road, the park has a big ground for jogging and picnics.
Jinnah Park
Jinnah Park in Kangniwala is a beautiful, lush green park which makes it a good picnic spot for family outings.
Haveli of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (Sher-e-Punjab)
Maharaja Ranjit Singh was the first Indian in a millennium to turn the tide of invasion back into the homelands of the traditional conquerors of India, the Pashtuns (Afghans), and thus, he became known as the Lion of the Punjab. At their height, his domains extended from the Khyber Pass in the northwest to the Sutlej River in the east and from the Kashmir region at the northern limit of the Indian subcontinent southward to the Thar (Great Indian) Desert. After decades of unwillingness to protect the Sikh heritage, the Gujranwala district administration has planned restoration and preservation of Maha Singh’s tomb, located in the premises of Sheranwala Bagh but is now a crumbling structure with encroachments.
Gurdwara Rori Sahib
Gurdwara Rori Sahib, (Front View) Eimanabad Gujranwala Pakistan. This Gurdwara was built during the era of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (November, 1780 - June, 1839). Gurdwara Rori Sahib is the sacred shrine which marks the site where, according to tradition, Guru Nanak after the destruction of the town had stayed with Bhai Lalo. Here the Guru had to sit and lie on a hard bed of pebbles (small stones) as alluded to in Bhai Gurdas Varan.
Lodhi Era Mosque of Eminabad
Along the east side of a small reservoir built in the era of Jahangir stands a modest one-story brick mosque. The Pakistani architect and historian Kamil Khan Mumtaz believes that it was constructed in the Lodhi era (1451-1525), suggesting that it is one of the oldest standing mosques in Pakistan. One unique architectural feature is the use of both squinches and pendentives to bridge the gap between the square prayer chamber and the circular dome.
Sialkoti Darwaza (Brandreth Gate)
Brandreth Gate or Sialkoti Darwaza, is the only gate left out of the eleven that once allowed entrance to the walled city. Charrat Singh took possession of this collection of Gujjar villages and raised a fortification around it in the year 1756 and called it Gujraoli.