Updated On: 26 May, 2024 08:20 AM IST | Mumbai | Junisha Dama
Like most heritage buildings in Mumbai, Matunga’s British-era chawl Bhuta Niwas is set to make way for a high rise. Before rampant redevelopment changes the city’s landscape, set out on a trail using this guide

Buta Niwas in Matunga East will be making way for a high-rise. Pics/Ashish Raje
Can history truly brew in a chawl room? You would be surprised! Built to house migrant mill workers, chawls are synonymous with Mumbai and its mill history. Eventually, as the city developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, chawls sprung to house the natives while the British lived in sprawling bungalows. Chawls in Mumbai were mainly located in Girangaon (the village of the mills). The Girgaon chawls were where middle-class and upper-middle-class migrants moved in when they came to the city for higher education and white-collar jobs.
The chawls of Girgaon are built in the same style: single rooms, large balconies, and a common courtyard. But life in these chawls was starkly different, as these became the stage for social reform movements and activities during the independence era.