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Tuesday, August 17, 1999

Tatas buy memories, JRD's house

Manju AB  
MUMBAI, AUG 16: Tata Sons is planning to go ``beyond the last blue mountain'' and purchase the late JRD Tata's residence on Altamount Road valued at Rs 40 crore. It plans to convert the property into a museum on JRD to keep his memories alive for posterity.

Said an official spokesperson of the group, ``Tata Sons has bid for the property, but there are a number of permissions to be sought before acquiring it.'' JRD, however, never owned the place; he took the Scottish-style colonial bungalow `The Cairn' on rent (at Rs 1,200 per month) from his brother-in-law Sir Dinshaw Petit III. Years after JRD's death, Tata Sons now feels it must own the residence of the driving spirit behind the `Creation of Wealth'.

Cairn is a Scottish word for a pile of stones kept as a landmark, specially on a mountain or a path. The bungalow may have been the only concrete structure on Altamount Road when it was built in the middle of the 19th century. More than just a pile of stones, it has about 1.3 acre of lush green land and abuilt-up area of over 60,000 square feet, dotted with small beautiful cottages which serve as servant quarters. The bungalow was part of a larger estate called Mount IDA which had been sold to private developers decades back.

Situated amidst an acre of green grass - the last major patch of greenery atop Altamount Road - the bungalow has two formals: at the lower level there is the dining-cum-living room with a small flight of steps leading to 10 bedrooms, most of which usually lying vacant. Sir Dinshaw Petit III, brother of JRD's wife Thelma, purchased it in 1890 from a Scot called Robertson.

JRD and Thelma lived here for 50 years. After they passed away, the property was returned to a Parsi trust called Awabai Petit Residuary Estate Trust. To date, the bungalow remains locked with memories of its occupants.

Chief executive of the Petit Trust, R K Lalkaka, fondly remembers JRD as having had an interest in machine tools. ``He (JRD) was so interested (in machine tools) that he converted one of the roomsin the bungalow to a lathe workshop with special electrical connections. He used to spend his free time in this room,'' recalls Lalkaka. In fact, one of the 15 rooms in the bungalow still has the lathe works complete with electrical connections - just the way JRD last left it.

JRD used to drive a Chrysler from Cairn to work and people in the locality even today remember getting a lift in his car to town from Altamount Road, remembers an old man in the neighbourhood.

The bungalow is now classified as a heritage III structure by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation. The BMC's heritage preservation rules stipulate that modifications to the structure be undertaken only on condition that the style remains intact.

Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


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