Items | All in one-Combo of City, Dhobighat, Slum & Dabbawala with ferry and train ride.
All in one-Combo of City, Dhobighat, Slum & Dabbawala with ferry and train ride.
(2) Reviews
Mumbai
Important Information
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Wheelchair accessible
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Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
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Service animals allowed
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Public transportation options are available nearby
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Infants are required to sit on an adult’s lap
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Transportation options are wheelchair accessible
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Travelers should have at least a moderate level of physical fitness
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
Become our Lokal Curator
Are you ready to turn your hobbies into a business?
If you wish to see Mumbai in a day,then this tour is a best option for you. You can call this all in one tour, this tour is a tour of Mumbai including the Dhobi Ghat (Mumbai's Laundry Men), the Dhabbawala (the person who carries the lunch box) & the Dharavi Slum Tour. Practically you get a feel of all these tours in one glance.
Highlights
From 7 hours to 10 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
From 7 hours to 10 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
English speaking guide
All Fees and Taxes
Air-conditioned vehicle
Budget Indian meal would be provided.
Alcoholic Beverages
Itinerary
1
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus
Modeled on the lines of the St Pancras Station in London, Victoria Terminus is undoubtedly the Raj's piece de resistance, Complete with carved stone friezes, stained glass windows and flying buttresses. It is Gothic architecture at its best, an awesome edifice that most citizens view with deep pride. At the top of the central dome stands the triumphant figure of Progress. The station was christened to commemorate Victoria Jubilee Day in 1887 when India's first steam engine puffed out to neighbouring Thane, about 45 kms away. Today it has been rechristened Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus after the Maratha warrior. And the old steam engines have been replaced by electric ones. But to the 2.5 million commuters who push past its massive portals every day, this is still VT, the pulse of a throbbing city.
20 minutes
2
Marine Drive
Marine Drive is a skillfully laid-out boulevard in South Mumbai. It is actually an upturned 'C'-shaped six lane concrete road, which lengthens to 3 km along the coastline - a natural bay. This avenue connects Nariman Point with Malabar Hills. Situated over domesticated land, facing west-south-west, its coastline forms the part of the Arabian Sea. What draws attention to this avenue is the striking esplanade next to the road, where scores of people come to breathe fresh air and view sunset.
25 minutes
3
Gateway of India
Mumbai's most famous monument, this is the starting point for most tourists who want to explore the city. It was built as a triumphal arch to commemorate the visit of King George V and Queen Mary, complete with four turrets and intricate latticework carved into the yellow basalt stone. Ironically, when the Raj ended in 1947, this colonial symbol also became a sort of epitaph: the last of the British ships that set sail for England left from the Gateway. Today this symbol of colonialism has got Indianised, drawing droves of local tourists and citizens. Behind the arch, there are steps leading down to the water.
25 minutes
4
Mani Bhavan Gandhi Museum
Mani Bhavan is the old Mumbai residence of Mahatma Gandhi. It's a pretty, two-storied structure that now houses a reference library with over 2000 books, a photo exhibition of the Mahatma's life, and well preserved memorabilia, including an old charkha or spinning wheel that Gandhiji used to use. Today, its only a symbolic exhibit that lies unused, but many old Gandhians still visit the place to pay homage to their hero and demonstrate the noble art of spinning your own yarn!
20 minutes
5
Colaba
From ferry point at Apollo bunder in Colaba get to go on a ferry tour, cruising along the Mumbai city's coast line.
20 minutes
6
Churchgate Railway Station
Dababwala tour:
See the live activity of Dabbawala at Churchgate station with a train ride.
A dabbawala (one who carries the lunch box), is a person in the Indian city of Mumbai whose job is to carry and deliver freshly made food from home in lunch boxes to office workers. Dabbawala in action Although the service remains essentially low-tech, with the barefoot delivery men as the prime movers, The success of the system depends on teamwork and time management .
50 minutes
7
Dhobi Ghat
A unique feature of Mumbai, the dhobi is a traditional laundryman, who will collect your dirty linen, wash it, and return it neatly pressed to your doorstep. All for a pittance. The "laundries" are called "ghats": row upon row of concrete wash pens, each fitted with its own flogging stone. The clothes are soaked in sudsy water, thrashed on the flogging stones, then tossed into huge vats of boiling starch and hung out to dry. Next they are ironed and piled into neat bundles, almost two hundred dhobis and their families work together in what has always been a hereditary occupation.
35 minutes
8
Dharavi
Walking tour inside Asias biggest Slum Dharavi, its a one to one and a half hour walk inside slum area where you get to see both residential and commercial part of Slums.
1 hour
All in one-Combo of City, Dhobighat, Slum & Dabbawala with ferry and train ride.
(2) Reviews
Mumbai
About
If you wish to see Mumbai in a day,then this tour is a best option for you. You can call this all in one tour, this tour is a tour of Mumbai including the Dhobi Ghat (Mumbai's Laundry Men), the Dhabbawala (the person who carries the lunch box) & the Dharavi Slum Tour. Practically you get a feel of all these tours in one glance.