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          Patna, May 13 (IANS) The Indian version of Cambodia's   world-famous Angkor Wat temple complex will now be built in Bihar's East   Champaran district on over 50 acres of land."There is no land shortage   in East Champaran since the Kathwalia Matth is ready to provide us more than 50   acres. People from three villages have also agreed to donate land," Acharya   Kishore Kunal, secretary of the cash-rich Mahavir Mandir Trust which is building   the temple, told IANS.
 
 |  The trust has also revised the plan. The temple would be spread over 100 acres   and cost over Rs.300 crore, said Kunal, a retired police officer. The structure   would be bigger than the one in Cambodia, considered by some as the largest   Hindu temple complex in the world.
 Angkor Wat was built in the 12th   century during Hindu king Suryavarman's rule and is today a Unesco World   Heritage Site.
 
 The proposed "Virat Angkor Wat Ram Mandir" will have idols   of Radha-Krishna, Shiva-Parvati, Ganesh, Surya, Vishnu and Dashavataram -- the   10 incarnations of Vishnu, he said. It will be designed by a temple architect   from Ahmedabad, Piyush Sompura.
 
 The five-storey, 1,240 feet long, 1,136   feet wide and 270 feet tall temple will be one of the tallest structures in the   world, said Sompura, who will also raise funds for the project from India and   abroad.
 
 "We will use the famous chunar stones, which Emperor Ashoka had   used for his inscriptions," Sompura, whose family has been designing temples for   centuries, told IANS. "Generations will feel proud."
 
 "It will follow the   architectural design of Angkor Wat but will not be an exact replica because our   measurements vary," added Kunal.
 
 
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