BEST’s lost-and-found treasure has now become a central attraction at the undertaking’s museum at Anik depot in Sion. Reports Rajendra B. Aklekar (Pics/Atul Kamble)
Updated On: 2024-03-26 10:41 AM IST
Compiled by : ronak mastakar
Coins from 84 countries and currency notes from 60 nations that remained unclaimed over the last decade are attracting crowds
Yatin S Pimpale, museum curator, said, “We have put all the coins on proper display country-wise in small decorative gift trays. The currency notes have been put up on display boards. These have been the main attraction for one and all who visit the museum, especially school kids. There are coins from Tanzania, Turkey, Venezuela, Yemen, Sweden, Romania, Qatar. You name a country and we have its coins”
The currency and coin section has become one of the central attractions of the museum, which displays a comprehensive history of the BEST transport and electricity undertaking
Pimpale said his assistant Ambadas Garje and another official, Sandip Shete, helped with the display
“We have put them on display in decorative trays (used for gifting chocolates). Both took great efforts to exhibit this currency during an exhibition event held a few months ago,” Pimpale explained
The museum, set up around 1983, houses significant relics of Mumbai’s transport and electrification history such as the earliest power meters, old bus tickets, ticket-dispensing machines, working models of miniature trams and buses, a host of archival photographs and also a clay and plastic storyboard depicted how Bombay once thought of running underground local trains
It was originally located at the Kurla bus depot but as that site began to face space crunch, it was shifted to Anik in the nineties where it has remained since