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Mumbai: After a four-year toil, Mata Ramabai Ambedkar Smashan Bhumi – Mumbai’s most modern and aesthetically designed crematorium – is finally ready to be handed over to the BMC. Located on Dr E Moses Road in Worli and built at a cost of Rs 40 crore, the facility is a visual relief compared to the shabby and rubbish-strewn municipal crematoriums in the city. Soot-blackened pyre sheds and dilapidated waiting areas add more macabre.
In 2019, Antim Sanskar Seva organisation, part of the Parekh Parivar Charity Trust, had signed a memorandum of understanding with the BMC to redevelop the Worli crematorium. Funded by philanthropists like the JSW Foundation, Tata Group, the Mahindra group and the H T Parekh Foundation, the funeral home now features gas and traditional wood furnaces, sun-lit atriums, and waiting and landscaped areas. Like other civic-run crematoriums, the new facility will be free or subsidised.
FPJ
Dr Ramnik Parekh of the Hiralal Parekh Parivar Charity Trust said that the crematorium’s architecture is influenced by the idea that the kin of the deceased should get privacy. Till now, the concept of privacy has evaded the public crematoriums, remarked Parekh. Each furnace is surrounded by a secluded waiting area for mourners while stone-covered platforms for last rites have been built in front of each furnace. In addition, there are two vacant spaces that can accommodate furnaces in the future.
The project’s structural blueprint was designed by Mumbai-based RMA Architects. Staying close to its vision of a sanctuary for mourners, the new crematorium has received accolades from its benefactors. A testimonial from Anand Mahindra, Executive Chairman of Mahindra and Mahindra which is one of the biggest benefactors of the project, said, “This (the facility) will provide bereaved families with a calm and serene ambience as they bid a respectful farewell to their loved one.”
FPJ
The crematorium has three gas-powered furnaces, two spaces for traditional wood pyres and one advanced version of the wood furnace that saves logs. “While a traditional wood pyre uses 400 kg of wood, the closed-wood furnace uses just 100 kg,” highlighted Parekh.
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