[1] Yaksha Malla encircled Khowpa Bhaktapur city with moats and defense walls pierced with defense gates and ordered the construction of The Palace of Fifty-five Windows (Bhaktapur's Royal Palace).
[3] He constructed the Pashupatinath Temple, a replica of the temple by the Bagmati River in Yein Kathmandu and the Siddha Pokhari, a large rectangular water tank located near the main city gate of Khowpa Bhaktapur.
[4] Early in his reign, he raided south into Mithila, into the State of Bihar and as far as Bengal.
[5] He consolidated control over the trade route to Tibet and captured the Tibetan stronghold of Shelkar Dzong.
[5] As a result of his conquests, the boundary of Nepal extended as far as Sikkim in the east, Kerung in the North, Gorkha in the west, and Bihar in the south.