A journey through India’s affordable housing Part 2: to the outskirts of Mumbai

Microfinance Focus, 25 November 2012, Co-authored with Vikash Kumar
 
This article is part of a series aimed at understanding what’s happening in India’s affordable housing sector.  It is based on interviews with residents of three low-cost housing projects:  Vaishnavi Sai (outside Mumbai), Anandgram (outside Pune), and Janaadhar Shubha (outside Bangalore).   The interviews were conducted during May-June 2012.  Read Part 1 here.

After a long train ride – nearly two hours – the line ends.  Passengers disembark at a small, but bustling community, easily covered on foot.  The commerce around the station is busy, but within a few city blocks, one already spies farmland beyond the last rows of houses.  Residents of all stripes live here, but the feel is decidedly working-class.

This could easily be late 19th century streetcar suburb outside Chicago or New York.  Or a fin-de-siècle banlieue on the outskirts of Paris.  But no, it’s Virar, one of the terminal stops on the Western Railways line heading north out of Mumbai.  Read full article here.

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