Pip: Mumbai — a city so alive it apparently only quiets down around 3 a.m., and even then, you probably shouldn’t take a taxi.
Mara: INDIVUE brings us inside that city today, walking through the landmarks, the street food, the beaches, and the outdoor laundry that somehow made the top ten. Let’s start with Mumbai’s best sights.
Best sights in Mumbai
Pip: Mumbai is one of India’s most visited cities, and the real question is what actually earns a place on a top-ten list when the city has this much competing for attention — UNESCO sites, Bollywood studios, colonial architecture, and the world’s largest outdoor laundry all in the same metro area.
Mara: The post sets the scene plainly: “Mumbai is known as a place where history, culture and modern lifestyle meet to create a colorful and vibrant environment.”
Pip: That’s not just promotional language — the list bears it out. The top spot goes to the Gateway of India, a 1924 monument at Apollo Bunder built to commemorate King George V’s visit, and it also happens to be your departure point for the Elephanta Caves ferry.
Mara: The Elephanta Caves are number four on the list and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, carved on an island in Mumbai Harbor and filled with sculptures depicting the life of Shiva. Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, the city’s busiest railway station, is also UNESCO-listed — its Gothic architecture alone is described as a sight worth seeing.
Pip: So two of the top five are UNESCO sites you might walk past while trying to catch a commuter train. That’s a dense city.
Mara: Marine Drive rounds out the upper tier — a 3.6-kilometer coastal road along the Arabian Sea, nicknamed the “Queen’s Necklace” for the way its nighttime lighting strings together like pearls. The post notes it’s especially popular at sunset with locals.
Pip: The list keeps going: Juhu Beach with its street vendors, the Bandra-Worli Sea Link lit up at night, the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya museum with its Indo-Saracenic architecture, and at number ten, Dhobi Ghat — hundreds of people washing and drying clothes in what the post calls “a unique insight into the life of the city.”
Mara: Beyond the top ten, the post covers Haji Ali Dargah on its small coastal island, Sanjay Gandhi National Park — one of the only national parks inside a major city — Mani Bhavan, Gandhi’s Mumbai home turned museum, and Chor Bazaar for antiques and vintage finds.
Pip: And Bollywood. The studios offer tours, sometimes with celebrity sightings, which is either the highlight of a trip or a very long queue, depending on your expectations.
Mara: The food thread runs through all of it — street staples like pav bhaji and vada pav on one end, high-end international dining on the other, and the ISKCON Temple in Juhu, whose restaurant the post specifically calls out for its vegetarian food.
Pip: Mumbai keeps turning up layers — monuments, markets, film sets, laundry operations of historic scale.
Mara: It’s a city that rewards the kind of attention a good travel guide actually pays to it. More of that kind of looking next time.
Read the original INDIVUE article here Best Sights in Mumbai





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