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Mumbai Travel Guide

Mumbai is one of the world's top ten centers of commerce by global financial flow, home to many important financial institutions. Along with the neighbouring suburbs it forms the world's fifth most populous metropolitan area.

About Mumbai

Mumbai covers an area of 169 sq. miles (437.7 square Km) and is estimated to have a population of 13.3 million people being the capital of the Indian state of Maharashtra. It is the second most populous city in India.

Marine Drive & Chowpatty Beach

Marine Drive (renamed Netaji Subhash Chandra Marg) follows the sweeping curve of sea that stretches north from Nariman Point’s high-rise buildings to infamous Chowpatty Beach, located at the foot of Malabar Hill. It’s the ultimate seaside promenade, where Mumbaikars come to escape the claustrophobia of central Mumbai, gratefully eyeing an endless horizon while strolling or jogging along the broad windswept promenade.

In the evenings, casual, single-item snack stalls are set up for brisk trade. This is the city’s ultimate sunset spot, when — having watched the orange globe sink into the Arabian Sea — you can witness the street lights transform Marine Drive into the aptly named Queen’s Necklace, a choker-length of twinkling jewels adorning Back Bay. The scene is perhaps best enjoyed with cocktail in hand at one of Marine Drive’s classier establishments: either the rooftop restaurant at the InterContinental Marine Drive or The Oberoi’s Bayview Bar, which also offers jazz music and cigars.

Once the sun has set, catch a ride (or walk) north along Marine Drive to Chowpatty, Bombay’s oldest seafront. Chowpatty is no longer the filth-ridden extravaganza its long-acquired reputation suggests (though it’s still not in any state for sunbathing or swimming), and at night it assumes the demeanor of a colorful fair. Children of all ages flock to ride the ancient Ferris wheels and tacky merry-go-rounds, and fly-by-night astrologers, self-styled contortionists, snake charmers, and trained monkeys provide the flavor of the bazaar — and bizarre — especially on weekends.

This is where locals love to consume the city’s famous street snacks, especially bhelpuri: crisp puffed rice, vegetables, and fried lentil-flour noodles doused in a pungent chutney of chili, mint, and tamarind, then scooped up with a flat puri (puffy deep-fried bread). Chowpatty bhelpuri is renowned throughout India, sold here by the eponymous bhelwallas, who now ply their trade in Bhel Plaza, where other traditional treats like kulfi are on offer at dirt-cheap prices.

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