Filmmaker Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri took a sharp jab at Mumbai’s urban infrastructure with a biting social media post that’s now making waves across the internet. Sharing a video of severe waterlogging on Pedder Road — one of Mumbai’s most elite addresses — Agnihotri wrote, “Rs 1 lakh per sq ft for the privilege of watching your car float past your living room.” His sarcastic commentary struck a chord with many Mumbaikars who are no strangers to the city’s monsoon-related woes, particularly the annual flooding that often renders even the most expensive neighborhoods helpless.
The video showcases flooded streets where luxury vehicles trudge through waist-high water, a surreal image when juxtaposed with the sky-high real estate prices that define Pedder Road. Agnihotri’s phrase, “World-class pricing. Third-world drainage,” aptly sums up the frustration felt by residents who pay a premium for status and comfort, only to be undone by inadequate civic infrastructure. His post serves as both satire and scathing social commentary on the paradoxes of modern urban life in India’s financial capital.
This incident is part of a much larger problem that plagues Mumbai every monsoon. The city’s fragile drainage system, further stressed by rapid and often unplanned urban development, has consistently failed to keep up with increasing rainfall and rising sea levels. Natural water bodies have been filled in to make way for high-rises, and holding ponds that once helped manage rainwater runoff have all but disappeared. The result? Regular flooding not only in low-lying or older parts of the city, but now also in posh neighborhoods once considered immune to such civic failures.
Agnihotri’s post raises a critical question — what good is luxury if the basics of urban planning are ignored? As Mumbai continues to chase vertical growth and global status, it faces a growing credibility crisis. Glitzy skyscrapers and posh addresses cannot mask the underlying infrastructural neglect. Until the city rethinks its approach to sustainability and resilience, even its most privileged citizens will have no choice but to wade through the consequences.
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