The main roads are depicted on the map in a triangular shape. The Lower Begampet and Panja Gutta roads diverged from the Amirpet main road are portrayed well on the map. Today, these places are the center of commercial activity, especially famous for coaching, as well as, software training institutes. Initially, these places were mere villages. The Lower Begampet road is located to the south of Begampet Railway Station. The Begampet became the center of the activity was with the introduction of railway station there and due to its proximity to the military region of Secunderabad as well. The railway station built over there itself was for the convenience of military officers stationed nearby the areas. And, the place Begampet was named after Bashir-Ul-Unnisa Begum, daughter of the Nizam-ul-Mulk Asaf Jah II, was actually part of her dowry in her marriage with Shams -ul- Umra Amir-i-Kabir belongs to Paigah family.
The fascinating story behind the place name Amirpet (Ameerpet today) is that the area was part of jagir land during Nizam. Nizam gifted the land to one of his Jagirdar named Amir Ali in the 1900s and the latter built a palace over the land and used it as a summer resort. And, the Panja Gutta road, Panja Gutta village with small huts, and Pahar (hill) Panja Gutta, the rocky terrain are the other places showed on the map. The name of localities on or around hilly would be called along with either Tekri or Pahar. According to the local tradition, the place got the name from a rocky formation nearby it, is known as Panjagutta Pahad (hill). There were impressions of palm (panja) and ghutna (knee) engraved on one rock, from which the surrounding areas came to be called as Panja Gutta over a period of time. It is believed that these impressions are of Hazrat Ali, the Imam of Shiites. Apart from these, cart tracks and the house of Agha Md. Ali Khan are visible on the map.