The tomb of Bani Begam, the daughter of Aurangzib, is in the centre of a large quadrangular garden at Roza, and is surrounded by a handsome wall with arched recesses on the inside. An elegant kiosk at each corner angle stands on eight pillars, and is surmounted by an Indo-Saracenic dome, fluted externally. The main entrance is in the centre of the north wall, and a mosque is in the south wall; while a corresponding open pavilion is in each of the remaining walls. The ground inside is laid out in the usual form of an Eastern garden, and contains cisterns and fountains. The tomb of the Begam is within another walled enclosure in the middle of the garden, and has four small minarets around it. A pretty summer house in the centre of each wall in this second enclosure, has sixteen slender but elegant pillars, supporting a domed roof in the curious form belonging to the Bengal style. There are also specimens of perforated stone-work in the makbarra.