Once while visiting Bombay,
India, George Bernard Shaw was asked if he wanted to travel to Agra to see the
Taj Mahal. "I have no desire to see it," the writer replied, "as the Taj Mahal
where I am staying is good enough for me." Shaw was referring to the Taj Mahal
Palace & Tower, which today is the flagship of the international Taj hotel
chain.
Built in 1903, the Taj was the brainchild of Indian steel
magnate Jamsetji N. Tata, who believed that a grand hotel would help establish
Bombay, now known as Mumbai, as one of the world’s great cities. Early guests at
the property included maharajas and princes from Indian states, as well as Shaw
and his literary peers from the British Isles. When English author Aldous Huxley
arrived at the hotel, he remarked that it combined "the style of the South
Kensington Museum with an Indian pavilion at an international exhibition."
Indeed, with soaring domes, cupolas, vaulted ceilings, and
other divergent features, the Taj’s architecture displays a vast range of
influences: Moorish, Italian Renaissance, Asian, and Rajput. The property also
houses an art collection—the most comprehensive collection of any hotel in
India—that includes 16th-century Goan Christian artifacts and Bastar tribal
pieces from the 15th century. Furnishings include crystal chandeliers and other
period pieces that the Taj acquired from prominent local families in the 1960s,
when several of the mansions in Bombay were demolished to make way for high-rise
apartment buildings.
In 2003, the colonial-era wing of the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower underwent
an extensive renovation. The city’s most significant colonial monument, the
Gateway of India, is visible from several of the wing’s guest rooms, as are the
multicolored fishing and sailing boats on the nearby Arabian Sea. Regardless of
the angle, as Shaw no doubt would attest, the Taj affords a captivating view.
LOCATION On the Arabian Sea
in the heart of Mumbai’s tourist district.
ACCOMMODATIONS The traditionally appointed Palace and more modern Tower, which
are connected by a corridor of shops and restaurants, contain 519 guest rooms
and 46 suites. Rooms overlook the city, the swimming pool, the Gateway of India,
or the Arabian Sea. Personalized butler service is available on request.
FACILITIES A swimming pool, a health club and spa, a yoga and Ayurveda
center, a business center with meeting rooms, and 11 banquet halls.
DINING The hotel’s eight restaurants offer a range of cuisine, from Indian and Mexican to Japanese and Thai.
CONCIERGE RECOMMENDS Reserve the hotel’s yacht and take a day trip to Elephanta Island, where India’s famous
temple caves were carved out of rock between the fifth and
eighth centuries.
RATES From $440 for a city-view room to $7,340 for the presidential
suite.
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The Taj Mahal Palace & Tower +91.22.6665.3366, 866.969.1825
www.tajhotels.com
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