The decision was taken in a meeting chaired by Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda with Chairman, Indian Trust for Rural Heritage and Development, S K Misra regarding Rakhigarhi project here today.
The Chief Minister said that he would also visit Rakhigarhi on June 12, "which is the biggest Harappan site in India and the second largest Harappan site after Mohenjodaro."
Hooda said a meeting would also be conducted with Union Culture Minister Chandresh Kumari so that all the excavation work would soon be carried out in consultation with Archeological Survey of India.
He also directed Principal Secretary, Archives, Archeology and Museum Department, Vijai Vardhan to expedite the project.
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Vardhan apprised the Chief Minister that the department would engage expert heritage architect for setting up of the Centre and the work would be completed very soon.
Villagers have donated the six acre land to the state government to develop a museum.
It was in 1963 that Rakhigarhi was identified to have the remains of the Indus Valley civilisation.
The ASI took the mounds in its protection in 1997 and the excavation that lasted from 1998 to 2001 revealed a city that was much larger than Harappa and Mohenjodaro, which are now in Pakistan.
In May 2012, the Global Heritage Fund, declared Rakhigarhi as one of the 10 most endangered heritage sites in Asia.