Taj Palace after 26/11

Taj Palace after 26/11

The design of this apartment facing Ipanema beach, in Rio de Janeiro, was designed for a couple with two young children, who wanted a space to accompany their daughters' growth and also environments with privacy for home office work.

Taj Palace after 26/11

  • Clients:IHCL
  • Location:Mumbai
  • Project Year:2008
  • Project Types:Hotel
  • Area:20,000 sq.ft

On 4th December 2008 at around 11 pm, I received a call from Mr. Arindam Mukerjee, Director - Projects of Taj Group of Hotels asking me to come to Mumbai the next day morning for an urgent meeting. This was just a week after the deadly 26/11 terrorist attack on the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai. When I reached the Oxford House, which is the corporate office of Indian Hotels Company Ltd, who are the owners of Taj Group, just behind the Taj Mahal Hotel, the entire place was like a fortress. There were military personnel everywhere. You were not even permitted anywhere near the place. I was escorted to the office after getting special permission from the security. I was told by the management of Taj that I should go into the hotel and assess the extent of damage and the repair time for the wooden floor in the heritage block of Taj. They want the hotel to be made functional (partly at least) within a month. We have been working with Taj group for their prestigious projects since the year 2000 and we were their preferred contractor for all the major projects for wooden floors. We were told that time is the key, and they are only giving contracts to their best vendors, and we are the only vendor selected for the wooden floors.

The scenes I saw inside the hotel were heart breaking. Guest rooms were a mess. Things were spread out of the room, doors were in a broke open stage, bullet holes everywhere, blood stains, some guest rooms destroyed by blasts. The wooden floors were damaged everywhere. Water was everywhere and some of the floors were damaged due to grenade attacks. It was a challenge we had never undertaken, and a sense of patriotism was involved when we undertook this project. We also tried to renovate and repair as much as floor as possible instead of replacing the floor. And the priority should be given to the lobby area and the 'Shamiana' coffee shop which was part of the lobby. A grenade had fallen in the wooden floor in the 'Shamiana wooden floor' and there was a big hole in the centre of the floor.

We mobilized our team and within 20 days, we renovated the floor in the entire lobby area by replacing just about 10% of the wooden floor. The hotel was partly re-opened to public by end of 2008, which was indeed a proud moment to us. Then we went on working in the other parts of the hotel for another year or so to renovate the wooden floors in the guest rooms and other restaurants. We can proudly say that we renovated about 60% of the wooden floors without replacing the timber. The entire project was one of the most challenging and satisfying of all the projects we have done.