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Visi Tilak is an award winning journalist, writer, talented musical and visual artist, and craftswoman. She is passionate about the arts, culture, and avidly tracks the news and current events. This blog is a reflection of her varied interests. and is meant to be a proverbial "watering hole" or "office fountain" for discussions, commentary and opinions on these various themes.
Friday, July 23, 2010
NYTimes.com: Can Mumbai Cope With a New Landmark?
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
NYTimes.com: 'Nine Lives'
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NYTimes.com: India Adopts a New Symbol for Its Currency
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Friday, July 16, 2010
As wealth rises in India, so do private towns - CSMonitor.com
As wealth rises in India, so do private towns
As more Indians pack into already crowded cities, developers are wooing wealthy urbanites with private towns boasting amenities like gardens, pools, walkable streets, schools, and a golf academy.
By Vaishnavi Chandrashekhar, Correspondent / July 16, 2010
Lavasa and Pune, India
In a valley surrounded by seven small hills in western India, a new town is taking shape.
Skip to next paragraphIts downtown of hotels, a town hall, and Mediterranean-inspired apartments sits beside a manmade lake. Row houses are being built. Uninterrupted power and water are promised – as are top-notch schools, a space education park designed with NASA know-how, and a Nick Faldo Golf Academy.
Lavasa could be the antithesis of today’s Indian cities – a green and orderly space free of the chaos and pollution of, say, Mumbai (Bombay), the sprawling megalopolis only three hours away. Slated to open later this year, it is the most ambitious of a slew of new townships being developed by the private sector, aimed at India’s burgeoning urban elite.
Such private towns advertise not just walkable streets and swish office buildings but also proximity to IT parks and special economic zones, whose professionals they aim to attract.
They also exemplify India’s uneven economic growth. Some townships have taken over farmland. Most keep hawkers and shanties at bay with gates and security guards, yet rely on a local supply of cheap labor – often the farmers who once owned the land. The new townships “are an indicator that the rich in India are increasing rapidly,” says urban development expert Prakash Apte based in Mumbai. But “they’re also a sign of the growing inequality.”
Continue reading this article at -- As wealth rises in India, so do private towns - CSMonitor.com
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