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On 1 January 2018 the output of the field was stated as 205,000 barrels per day (32,600 m 3 /d). [8] In 2020 the output of the field was 170,000 barrels per day (27,000 m 3 /d) and the output of the Bassein field was 60,000 barrels per day (9,500 m 3 /d). ONGC temporarily suspended operations at two drilling rigs in the Mumbai High and Bassein ...
The Regal Cinema is an Art deco movie theatre located at Colaba Causeway, in Mumbai, India. [1] Built by Framji Sidhwa, the first film to be aired at the Regal was the Laurel and Hardy work The Devil's Brother in 1933. [2] [3] According to the Limca Book of Records, it is the first air conditioned theatre of India. [4]
Recently some cinemas, (often interchangeably called "theatres") have been forced to shut shop due to the high entertainment tax (which stands at 55%), that results in huge losses. Since 2000, 50 cinemas have shut down in the city. Mumbai is known for its entertainment industry so there are a lot of cinemas.
The release was blocked until the verdict of the lawsuit by the Bombay High Court on the petition of the under-trials. [26] The film was originally set to be released in India on 28 January 2005. [27] The producers appealed in the Supreme Court but the High Court order was upheld. The movie finally saw its release on 9 February 2007. [28] 2005 Amu
Bombay is a 1995 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film [2] written and directed by Mani Ratnam, starring Arvind Swamy and Manisha Koirala (in her Tamil film debut). The film tells the story of an inter-religious family in Bombay before and during the Bombay riots, which took place between December 1992 and January 1993 after the demolition of the Babri Masjid led to religious tensions ...
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The park was designed and laid out in 1881 by Ulhas Ghatkopar over Bombay's main reservoir, some say to cover the water from the potentially contaminating activity of the nearby Towers of Silence. When seen from the air, the walkway inside the park (Hanging Gardens Path), spell out the letters PMG (Pherozeshah Mehta Gardens) in cursive.
Watson's Hotel was designed by the civil engineer Rowland Mason Ordish, who had worked on the Crystal Palace in London in 1850, and went on to design a number of cast and wrought-iron structures such as bridges and market halls, notably the Albert Bridge in London the St Pancras Station station roof (co-designer).