
Welcome to Tanmaye's Amazing Space
Cosmic odyssey since 1986 - where questions turn into wonder.
A space studio built for children, students, families,and anyone who has ever looked up and whispered “what is that?” Telescopes, 3D halls, clubs, and 1000+ cosmic stories in the heart of Ahmedabad.
🚀 Kids love this: touch, explore, ask, discover
- Friday Film Fiesta
- Sky-watch parties
- Junior astronaut fun
- Asteroid hunts
- 3D space adventures

Rockets, galaxies, Moon walks, and ISRO milestones — under one roof.

Inside the experience
Not a museum where you whisper — a studio where you wonder out loud
Every corner is built to reward curiosity: younger visitors get wow-moments and simple language, while serious students find depth, data, and mentors who have seen decades of real sky events.
Start anywhere
Choose your mission
Every page is a wormhole — dive deeper into the parts of the universe you love most. Tap a card and keep exploring.
Your journey in three beats
Simple on purpose — so families, schools, and solo explorers know exactly what happens after they say “I'm interested.”
01Pick your path
Tour the studio, join a club night, book a school batch, or simply walk in curious — there is no wrong door.
02Look, touch, ask
Guides love questions. Models, 3D films, telescopes, and stories turn abstract chapters into lived memory.
03Keep watching the sky
Eclipses, meteor showers, and planet seasons return every year — we help you know when and where to look next.
Learning alongside India & the world
Certificates, collaborations, and inspiration from space science institutions — the same logos you know from missions, textbooks, and news.

In the news
Trusted by families, schools, and the city press
Local coverage, TV segments, and years of public sky events — we love when the community looks up together.
Browse media archive ↗Did you know?
Pocket-sized mysteries for bedtime astronomers
Three quick brain-ticklers — the kids page has many more with playful answers.
Open the curiosity corner →


“Why do stars twinkle but planets don’t?”
Starlight is a tiny point that gets bent and jiggled by Earth’s moving air. Planets look slightly bigger in the eyepiece, so the wiggles average out — they shine steadier.
“How long would a sunbeam take to cross our galaxy?”
Light needs about 100,000 years to travel from one side of the Milky Way to the other. That is why astronomers use light-years — distances are enormous.
“What is a light-year, really?”
It is a distance, not a time. One light-year is how far light travels in a year — about 9.46 trillion kilometres. It is a cosmic measuring tape.
Why a whole building for astronomy?
Because the sky is not a paragraph — it is a 360° experience. Models, films, telescopes, and patient mentors together create memories that outlast any exam syllabus.
We are here for the child who draws Saturn with rings, the parent who missed a meteor shower, and the student dreaming of ISRO. Ahmedabad is the city of Dr. Vikram Sarabhai — this studio is our way of keeping that spirit bright, public, and joyful.
- ✓Structured learning paths for schools and hobbyists alike
- ✓Real observations — comets, eclipses, transits, meteor showers
- ✓A safe space to ask “silly” questions (they never are)


“The best homework is a clear night.”
— Team TAS
Quick answers before you visit
More detail on the Visit page.
Who is the studio for?
Everyone — young learners, families, college groups, teachers, and anyone who looks up at night with questions. No prior science background is required.
How do I book a studio tour?
Use the official booking form linked on this site. For school batches or special programmes, mention your group size and preferred dates in the form.
What should I bring?
Comfortable shoes, curiosity, and a notebook if you love jotting questions. Cameras are usually welcome for personal memories — check during booking if a session has special rules.
Ready when you are
Bring your questions — we'll bring the universe (and the telescope).
Book a studio tour, get directions, or message us through the channels linked on the Visit page. School coordinators: ask about TASC batches and group slots.

















