Old Lucknow, the heart, the soul, and honestly, the whole personality of this city. It’s where history lives in the walls, chaos lives on the roads, and your business lives in everyone’s mouth. Narrow galis, feral wires, battery rickshaws with main character energy, and a neighbourhood aunty network that puts Google to shame. If you’re from here, you already know. And if you do, keep reading, because this one’s made for you.
Never-ending traffic

If you’ve ever tried to get somewhere in Old Lucknow and actually arrived on time, congratulations, you’ve unlocked a superpower the rest of us are still chasing. Life here moves at its own gloriously chaotic rhythm, and nowhere is that more obvious than on the roads. Welcome to the traffic tango, where auto-rickshaws lead, cycle-wallahs freestyle, and that one goat? He answers to nobody.
Your friends think you stay in a fancy kothi

Tell someone you live in Old Lucknow and suddenly you’re practically royalty, “Arre, kothi hogi na badi si?” Oh absolutely. A kothi with four neighbours sharing one courtyard, a ceiling fan older than your grandparents, and a staircase that doubles as a storage unit. The word “kothi” does a lot of heavy lifting here, honestly. Nawabi vibes on the outside, pure jugaad on the inside.
You’re the designated Chikankari shopping guide for every visiting relative

The moment you tell someone you live in Old Lucknow, you’re automatically enrolled into a lifelong, unpaid career, personal Chikankari shopping guide. Relatives you haven’t seen in years will suddenly remember you exist. “Arre, tum toh wahi rehte ho na, chalo na saath!” Three hours, forty shops, and seventeen “bas ek aur dekhte hain” later, you’re still smiling. Barely, but still.
The aroma of food from neighbours’ houses always reaches your home

Living in Old Lucknow means your nose is basically on a full-time job, and it never clocks out. Biryani from the left, nihari from the right, and something suspiciously delicious wafting up from downstairs at exactly 1 PM. You’re trying to diet, you’re trying to resist, but then the wind shifts and suddenly you’re standing in your neighbour’s kitchen asking “aunty, kya bana hai aaj?”
Alleys so narrow that Google Maps just gives up

Navigation in Old Lucknow is less about maps and more about mythology. Google Maps will confidently guide you in, then go suspiciously quiet, one wrong turn and you’re in a gali so narrow your shoulders are basically load-bearing walls. Locals give directions like “teen modon ke baad, neele darwaze wali dukaan ke peeche” and somehow that works better than any app ever will.
Everyone knows everyone

Privacy in Old Lucknow is basically a myth people tell their kids. Bunk college, take a little detour through Aminabad, think nobody saw you, and by the time you’re home, your parents already know, have discussed it, and your dad’s waiting with a look. Nobody called, nobody texted, it just travelled. Old Lucknow doesn’t need Wi-Fi, the aunty network has had five bars since 1987.
Battery rickshaws occupying 80% of roads

Old Lucknow has a new nawab, and it runs on battery. Battery rickshaws own these roads, fully, unapologetically, magnificently. They’re slow, they’re wide, they travel in convoys, and they answer to absolutely no one. Honk all you want, they will not flinch. You can try overtaking, but surprise, there’s another one, and another. It’s not a traffic problem, it’s a takeover.
Electric wire clusters everywhere

Look up anywhere in Old Lucknow and the sky is just a rumour, what you actually see is a glorious, gravity-defying spaghetti of electric wires. Hundreds of them, going everywhere and nowhere at once. Which one powers your house? Nobody knows. Which one’s even live? Great question. Electricians come, stare for five minutes, and leave looking philosophical. It shouldn’t work. It has no right to work. And yet, lights on, fans running, life goes on.
You get jealous of the wide roads when you visit new city localities

Take someone from Old Lucknow to Gomti Nagar and you’ll witness a full emotional journey in real time. First comes the silence. Then the slow, almost suspicious staring at wide roads, actual footpaths, and cars parked like civilised vehicles. “Yaar, itni jagah?” And just like that, a tiny ache sets in. You love your galis, you do, but some days, a wide road hits like a personal grudge.
So many good food options that you are eating outside every second day

Living in Old Lucknow is a full-time war between your willpower and your stomach, and your stomach hasn’t lost once. Gol Darwaze ki kulfi, Tunday ke kebab, that one biryani wala you keep “visiting for the last time”, it’s relentless. You wake up with good intentions, step outside, and the smell of nihari just looks you in the eye. Diet? Absolutely. One hundred percent. Kal se pakka.
Every corner has history

History doesn’t sit in museums in Old Lucknow, it’s just casually hanging around everywhere, unbothered. That crumbling wall you park your scooty against? Probably witnessed three empires. That chai wala’s spot? Been there since before your nana’s nana. You’re not just living in a city, you’re living inside a textbook that never ends. Sounds poetic, until you’re late somewhere and a 200-year-old chowk is standing between you and the main road.




















