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D.N. Nagar

AndheriMumbai geography stubsNeighbourhoods in MumbaiUse Indian English from February 2019
D.N. Nagar Metro Station Main
D.N. Nagar Metro Station Main

D N Nagar is named after Dadabhai Naoroji. It is located within the triangle of Lokhandwala Complex, Seven Bungalows and Juhu Vile Parle Development Scheme (JVPD). Its educational establishments include Bhavan's College, Bhavan's A H Wadia High School, Bhavan's Sardar Patel College of Engineering, Bhavan's S P Jain Institute of Management, S C D Barfivala High School, Valia College and Pragat Vidya Mandir. D N Nagar is now accessible with Mumbai Metro which has an elevated station with the same name, located at India Oil Junction.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article D.N. Nagar (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

D.N. Nagar
Mumbai Dadabhai Naoroji Nagar (Zone 3)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: D.N. NagarContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 19.124085 ° E 72.831373 °
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Address


400058 Mumbai, Dadabhai Naoroji Nagar (Zone 3)
Maharashtra, India
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D.N. Nagar Metro Station Main
D.N. Nagar Metro Station Main
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Nearby Places

Four Bungalows

Four Bungalows is a neighbourhood in Mumbai. It is located about three kilometres from Andheri station and is in the vicinity of Lokhandwala Complex and Seven Bungalows. It is popular as one of the most systematic and a well organized hub for shopping. The five main landmarks here are, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, the Fish Market, Manish Market, the Good Shepherd Church and St. Louis Convent school, which is located within the second lane from the Four Bungalows signal/junction. It has a very famous and old Dairy and Restaurant known as Sharma Fastfood And Restaurant. It was established in around 1980. It consists one of the few HSBC branches in Mumbai. Other places in the vicinity include Convent Avenue, Ratan Nagar society and Manish Nagar. Also has a Gurudwara (Sikh temple) on the main road. Is accessible through BEST bus routes 266,249 and 251 from Andheri Station or you can use a Metro from the Andheri Station. Four Bungalows is named after the 'four bungalows' that once existed here during the British occupation. Two of them still exist today, one just opposite Good Shepherd Church. It is named Gulab Cottage. The other is in better condition and located in the lane just behind the Good Shepherd Church. This place also consists of a large number of residential buildings, built around 25 to 40 years past, that is the time, this place came under proper development. This place is easily accessible to Lokhandwala, Versova, Yari Road, Andheri Station and Juhu-Vile Parle. The depot for the Versova-Andheri Ghatkopar line of the Mumbai Metro is located here.

Gilbert Hill
Gilbert Hill

Gilbert Hill is a 200 ft (61 m) monolith column of black basalt rock at Andheri, in Mumbai, India. The rock has a sheer vertical face and was formed when molten lava was squeezed out of the Earth's clefts during the Mesozoic Era about 66 million years ago. During that era, molten lava had spread around most of the Indian states of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, covering an area of 50,000 square kilometres (19,000 sq mi). The volcanic eruptions were also responsible for the destruction of plant and animal life during that era. According to experts, this rare geological phenomenon was the remnant of a ridge and had clusters of vertical columns in nearby Jogeshwari which were quarried off two decades ago. These vertical columns are similar to the Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming, and the Devils Postpile National Monument in eastern California, USA. Gilbert Hill was declared a National Park in 1952 by the Central Government under the Forest Act. In 2007, after years of lobbying by geologists, the hill was declared a Grade II heritage structure by the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM), and all quarrying and other activities around the monument were prohibited. Over the period of time, Gilbert Hill has faced severe erosion problems too.Atop the rock column, two Hindu temples, the Gaodevi and Durgamata temples, set in a small garden, are accessed by a steep staircase carved into the rock. The hill offers a panoramic view of suburban Mumbai. Efforts are being made to convert Gilbert Hill into a tourist attraction and include it as a stop on a tour of Mumbai by Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation.