Bhuntar
Bhuntar is a town and a nagar panchayat in Kullu district in the state of Himachal Pradesh, India. It is 11 km from the Kullu town, and lies along National Highway 3. The Kullu-Manali Airport is located in Bhuntar.
History
During the British Raj, Bhuntar had a bazaar and a branch office for post and telegraphs.In 1905, Duff Dunbar, a British forest officer posted in Kullu, got a suspension bridge constructed at Bhuntar over the Beas River. The bridge connected the Kullu valley to the Parvati valley. The bridge was rendered unserviceable by heavy floods in September 1947. Thakur Beli Ram, a local leader from Kullu, had to take care of this and other simultaneous issues in the wider Kullu region soon after India's Independence.
Bhuntar was electrified alongside Kullu town in 1957. By 1961, Bhuntar already had an airstrip.
Bhuntar was first categorized as a town by the Census of India 1981.
Geography
Bhuntar is located on the right bank of the Beas River. Directly opposite Bhuntar, near the left bank of the Beas River, there is the confluence of the Parvati River with the River Beas. The Parvati Valley begins at this confluence and runs eastward, through a steep-sided valley towards Kasol and Manikaran.The next major settlement after Bhuntar, in the direction of Kullu, is Shamshi.
Accessibility
Bhuntar lies on the National Highway 3, which till 2010 was the National Highway 21.The airport at Bhuntar connects the Kullu valley to a few major north Indian cities, including Delhi and Amritsar.
Bhuntar is a centre within the Kullu valley for accessing places in the Kullu valley such as Shamshi, Kullu, and Manali, and for places in the Parvati valley such as Manikaran, Kasol, and Tosh.