Agra must be one of the most scorned cities in India &mdash it would seem that because it contains what is perhaps the most exquisite building in the world it is expected to be elevated above the travails of ordinary, rapidly growing, developing-world cities. It is not it has traffic, crowds, polluted waterways and a deteriorating built environment, but it also contains a great deal to charm and interest the visitor. Outside those protected bubbles where sit the well-known monuments there are lesser-known buildings &mdash mosques, tombs and houses &mdash that testify to a continuing history beyond the glorious era of the &lsquoGreat Mughals&rsquo, when Agra was a prosperous mercantile town during late-Mughal and colonial times. It is from this last period that most of the surviving historic domestic architecture was built, that which gives character to the streets and alleyways of the old urban areas, the disposition of which, particularly the main streets and the great gardens, was fixed during the time of Babur and his descendants.