Lower Kachura Lake


Lower Kachura Lake, also known as Shangrila Lake, is a lake located near the city of Skardu in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. Situated at the height of, it has had an operational resort for tourists on its bank since 1983. Through the architectural work of the resort and the background Karakoram hills, the landscapes of the lake make it one of the attractive tourist destinations within the northern Pakistan.

Shangrila Resort

Shangrila Resort Hotel was established in 1983 with the opening of the first resort hotel in Skardu. The Shangrila Resort Hotel was founded by Aslam Khan Afridi, a Pakistani military officer who served as the first commander of the Northern Scouts of the Pakistan Army. His son, Arif Aslam Khan is currently the chairman of the resort management. The resort is known for its restaurant that is built in the fuselage of an aircraft that had crashed nearby.
The resort was named after Shangri-La, an idyllic Himalayan paradise described in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon written by the British novelist James Hilton. In the novel, survivors of an early 1920s plane crash encounter Buddhist monks from a nearby temple who guide them to a lamasery filled with fruits and flowers. The monks claim to be hundreds of years old yet appear remarkably youthful. The seemingly earthly paradise is referred to as Shangri-La, a Tibetan-language word meaning, "heaven on Earth".