Mannanmoola is a residential locality near Peroorkada to the north eastern part of Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum) in the Indian state of Kerala, on the way to vattiyoorkavu. Once a remote village, Mannanmoola has seen rapid development over the last decade with the setting up of several residential colonies. Mannanmoola has one boundary demarked by the Killi River, which is crossed by the Mannanmoola Bridge en route to Vattiyoorkavu. The other localities in Mannanmoola's neighbourhood are Melathumele, Manikanteswaram, Thozhuvancodu, Oolampara etc. This area is part of Peroorkada Ward of the Corporation of Thiruvananthapuram and the elected Ward member is Mrs.P.Jameela Sreedharan.

Mannanmoola
Mannanmoola is located in Kerala
Mannanmoola
Mannanmoola
Location in Kerala, India
Coordinates: 8°32′14″N 76°57′59″E / 8.537250°N 76.96650°E / 8.537250; 76.96650
Country India
StateKerala
DistrictThiruvananthapuram
TalukasThiruvananthapuram
Government
 • BodyCorporation of Thiruvananthapuram
Languages
 • OfficialMalayalam, English
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
695005
Vehicle registrationKL 01
Literacy95%
Civic agencyCorporation of Thiruvananthapuram

Etymology

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The name Mannanmoola comes from two words "mannan" and "moola" meaning the locality of mannans or the washermen.[1] Nowadays the washermen exists only in the name of place. Its older name is Edakkulam.

Amenities

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Prominent institutions at Mannanmoola include the Concordia school, Central Government Employees quarters, Subhananda Ashram etc. The area have seen a rapid rise in urbanisation with the setting up of the new civil station at Kudappanakunnu near Peroorkada, the nearest important locality of Mannanmoola. Recently a few number of shops and shopping complexes are set up in the place. An ATM counter of SBI, a couple of Medical shops and several provision and utility shops are functioning. Some of the residential colonies are Mannamoola Residents Association (MRA), Chaithanya Gardens, VRA, GC Nagar, Surya Gardens, Co-Operative Housing Gardens, Devi Nagar etc. Salim brothers club is a major social welfare organisation based out of Mannanmoola.[2]

Place of interest

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Mannanmoola has a number of temples, the most famous being the Edakkulam Devi temple.[3] The other temples in the locality are Theruvil Bhagavathi temple, Theruvilparambu Temple etc. Manikanteswaram Siva temple, Thozhuvankodu bhagavathi temple,[4] Kavallur temple are important temples in the immediate neighborhood. Subhananda ashram[5] is having their ashram in Mannammoola.

Transport

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KSRTC is running several bus services in this route to down town Trivandrum and also to nearby localities like Peroorkada, Vattiyoorkavu, Nettayam, Kulashekharam, Kachani, Vellaikadavu etc. Multiple number of private buses are also running scheduled trips in this route. Auto Rickshaws are also available.

People

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The population of Mannanmoola has been getting more cosmopolitan, though like in most other places of Kerala, way behind the standards set by other major suburbs.[citation needed]

Recent past and growth

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Mannanmoola was a remote suburb of Thiruvananthapuram city until early 1990s with lush green paddy fields and low lying muddy trenches from the thriving fire brick business with a number of brick furnaces on the sides of the Killi river.

The locality expanded since the mid-1990s, when many government servants preferred to buy properties or build houses in this area of Thiruvananthapuram due to its proximity to downtown and the good amenities available in its 2 km circle at Peroorkada and Vattiyoorkavu as well as the accessibility of hospitals and well-run private schools.

References

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  1. ^ [1] Archived 4 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ /http://www.salimbrothers.in/
  3. ^ /"Edakkulam Devi Temple, Edakkulam Sree Bhagavathy Kshethram , devi temples in kerala". Archived from the original on 1 July 2011. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  4. ^ /http://thozhuvancode.blogspot.in/
  5. ^ /"::Atma Bodhodaya Sangham Sree Subhanandashram::The official website of Sree Subhanandashram Cherukole, Mavelikkara". Archived from the original on 23 February 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2012.