A good table, steady WiFi, and a coffee that lasts two hours is its own economy. Here are the Warangal cafes that finally support it.
Campus hunger has its own map. Around NIT Warangal it is drawn in dosa, budget biryani, late-night Maggi, and juice carts near the gates.
The tri-city wakes up on tiffin. Here are the Hanamkonda counters frying the crispest dosa and pouring the strongest filter coffee before 8 am.
After 11 pm the tri-city narrows to a handful of counters. Knowing the station-side spots and roll carts is a small survival skill.
Festival season turns Warangal sweet shops into war rooms. Here is where to get boondi laddu, Madatha kaja and clean gift boxes that travel well.
The Kakatiya stonework at Warangal Fort still stops people mid-step. Here is how to read the four Kirti Toranas and plan an unhurried morning.
The 12th-century Thousand Pillar Temple in Hanamkonda is a Kakatiya statement in stone, and the detail holds up nearly nine hundred years on.
Ramappa earned its UNESCO badge on merit. A day-trip guide to the floating-brick Kakatiya temple at Palampet, an hour and a half from the city.
