Mumbai: Commercial Capital of India
As you fly into Mumbai
you pass over some of the most horrendous slums you
will ever experience, a shantytown of enormous
proportions. The story goes that the local government
moved all the inhabitants out to purpose-built housing
only for many of them to sell the new properties and
quickly retreat back to the site and rebuild their
squalid dwellings. India is another world! To
locals you are arriving at Chhatrapati Shivaji
International Airport, still holding its three-letter
code BOM from earlier times.
The recent opening up
of the bilateral agreement between the UK and India
has seen a host of new routes, improved frequencies
and more airlines offering services between the two
countries. The market is under served with only 53% of
the passengers flying between the UK routing direct.
With five airlines now operating between London and
Mumbai many say that the legislators have got it
correct and time will prove that this is the capacity
that is required. The airlines serving the city via
such places as Bahrain and Doha are taking note. Local
carrier Jet Airways, now a London operator too, serves
29 destinations from BOM but its chances of picking up
connecting traffic must be limited. Mumbai domestic
airport is being updated from its 1950's image,
rebuilding rather than a new airport but it is 4k away
from the local terminal and even the OAG Flight Guide
Supplement says a 20-minute transfer time via the
local roads. In truth whoever supplied the information
was being very optimistic. Allow for an hour at least.
The infrastructure around the airport cannot cope.
Limousines, electric rickshaws and beggars on the same
single-track road do not mix. In truth the
international terminal functions OK but it cannot be a
gateway that India is proud of. There is even a
scanner for scrutinizing arriving luggage. The problem
is nobody looks at the screens.
Situated on the
Arabian Sea in the west of India, Mumbai has one of
the world's greatest natural harbors. In 1534 the
Portuguese named it Bom Bahai (beautiful bay) &endash;
the derivation of the name Bombay &endash; but in 1995
the decision was taken to rename the city in a more
traditional Indian manner. It is India's largest city
and commercial center. The population, thought to be
18m plus, is not that much less that the whole of
Australia. There are said to be 77,000 Tata taxis on
the streets. Don't go to Mumbai during the monsoon
season. June, July and even August. It gets very wet.
As for the heat it does not get much colder than 25C
and can get up to 40C+ before (the very hot) rains
come.
Mumbai is one of the
most important centers in India for the production of
cotton textiles. Other leading industries include
printing and publishing, shipbuilding and repairing,
and the manufacture of chemicals, machinery, metals,
metal products, and fertilizers. Mumbai is also the
center of India's large film industry, colloquially
termed "Bollywood" (after Bombay, the previous name,
and Hollywood), which greatly exceeds Hollywood in the
number of films produced annually. Film City is north
of the airport, a good hour from the business center.
Tourism is gaining economic importance. The fine and
clean sandy beaches at Juhu, on the Arabian Sea coast,
and Chowpatty, on the northern shore of Back Bay, are
popular destinations for both domestic and overseas
visitors.
Mumbai may be one of
the most squalid cities on earth but it is also the
proud possessor of a hotel that can hold its head high
with any around the world. All right labor is very
plentiful and cheap, but staff training and
presentation are down to the property and its
management. The Taj Mahal Palace & Tower exceeds
on all fronts. Undoubtedly one of the finest hotels in
the world and now just over 100 years old. The Taj
opened in 1903 with 30 private apartments, 350 double
and single rooms, electric lights, fans, bells and
clocks and four electric passengers lifts &endash;
true luxury at the turn of the 20th century. In 1973 a
tower wing was added. Extensively refurbished in time
for its centenary today the hotel is fully air
conditioned boosts 546 rooms, a massive open air
swimming pool with a deep end of 15 feet and plays
host to heads of state, celebrities and industry
leaders.
Just in front of the
hotel is the archway called The Gateway of India, the
principal landmark of Bombay. It was built in yellow
basalt to commemorate the royal visit of George V and
Queen Mary in 1911 and completed in 1924. The Delhi
Durbar was captured in film and is one of the great
events in the period of peace leading up to the First
World War. Boat trips are very popular from the area
in front of the Gateway and just like the railways you
can hire someone to queue and purchase your ticket. In
India begging is a profession! Besides the
Gateway of India, the Prince of Wales Museum was also
built to venerate King George's visit. The
construction of the museum is based on the Indo
Saracenic style of architecture and was successfully
completed in 1923. The Prince of Wales Museum boasts
of exhibits in various areas land includes paintings,
archaeology and natural history.
Mumbai is a city full
of gothic designs none of which would be out of place
in London. Now called the Central Railway Station, the
Victoria Terminus or VT is a magnificent building and
unlike some of its contemporaries likely to be around
for a long time.
However very much
worth a mention is the home of Mahatma Gandhi from
1917 to 1934. Currently under well thought out
restoration this quiet three-story home now preserves
the spirit of the man who preached peace and died at
the hand of an assassin with his life's work complete,
the foundation of the Indian state. There's a library
of Gandhi-related works, as well as displays of
photographs, posters, slogans, and other items that
document and explain Gandhi's fascinating life and his
fight for a nation's freedom. A moving
experience.
Mumbai even after
nearly 60 years of Indian independence is still
somehow a colonial city. The beggars on the streets
are difficult to comprehend. Yes there is poverty and
hands are outstretched the whole time. Litter seems to
be everywhere. Yet somehow the city thrives and one
can dine and spend money with the best. Not far from
the center is a golf course and the horse race track
is surrounded both by slums and high-rise buildings.
You send your clothes to be washed and beaten in the
open air by a railway track and they come back perfect
(providing you put your marker on them). Sophisticated
locals use that system plus the very latest in washing
machines. They somehow go hand in hand. Mumbai is a
true enigma. The airlines serving the city are in for
a boom. And then there is cricket! Perhaps
another story.
http://www.mumbainet.com