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Contents

   



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1 History  





2 References  





3 External links  














Trident Hotel, Nariman Point







مصرى
 

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Coordinates: 18°5537N 72°4913E / 18.9270°N 72.8204°E / 18.9270; 72.8204
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Trident Hotel
Trident hotel in 2005
Map
General information
LocationMarine drive road, Nariman point, South Mumbai, Maharashtra
AddressMarine Drive, Nariman Point, Mumbai (South), Mumbai district, Maharashtra, India, PIN - 400021
Town or cityMumbai
CountryIndia
Coordinates18°55′37N 72°49′13E / 18.9270°N 72.8204°E / 18.9270; 72.8204
Opened7 April 1973
OwnerEast India Hotels
Height117 metres (384 ft)[1]
Technical details
MaterialConcrete
Floor count35
Design and construction
Architecture firmP.G. Patki Associates
Main contractorShapoorji Pallonji & Co Limited
Website
www.tridenthotels.com

The Trident Nariman Point is a luxury hotel on Marine DriveinNariman Point, Mumbai, India. It is owned and operated by the Trident Hotels division of The Oberoi Group.

It has 35 floors, on completion in 1973, it was the tallest building in South Asia, surpassing the 105 metres (344 ft) Express Towers, located next door.[1] [citation needed] It stayed the tallest building in South Asia until 1980, when Phiroze Jeejeebhoy Towers were completed in downtown Mumbai .

History[edit]

The hotel opened on 7 April 1973[2] as the Oberoi-Sheraton Hotel. It was built by Mohan Singh Oberoi, at a cost of 180 million rupees, as a joint venture between his Oberoi Hotels and US-based Sheraton Hotels, which had an equity interest of $500,000.[3] Oberoi paid Sheraton a fee of $150 per room per year to manage the hotel, but this gave him access to an international reservations and marketing system, and also allowed him to qualify for a 43.5 million rupee loan from the United States Agency for International Development. The loan was contingent on Oberoi accepting four American directors on his board. As the Americans could not be present at meetings, they were represented by local stand-ins. The hotel showed a profit of 450,000 rupees in 1974, and by 1978 annual profits were 29.4 million rupees.[4]

In 1978, Sheraton signed a marketing agreement with ITC to represent the properties of their WelcomHotels division, located across India. Oberoi angrily called it a "breach of an agreement both in letter and in spirit". In addition, Sheraton demanded that the annual fee Oberoi paid be doubled to $300 per room per year, and that the new 200-room wing of the hotel that was then under construction (today known as The Oberoi Mumbai) be covered at the same higher rate. Oberoi severed the joint venture with Sheraton[4] and the hotel was renamed The Oberoi Towers on 5 March 1979.[5] The hotel was renamed Hilton Towers Mumbai on 5 April 2004, as part of a marketing alliance between Oberoi and Hilton Hotels.[6] It was renamed Trident Nariman Point on 1 April 2008,[7] when the alliance with Hilton ended.[8]

On the night of 26 November 2008, a series of terrorist attacks in Mumbai was launched, including an attack on the hotel. Two terrorists, Abdul Rehman alias Abdul Rehman Chhota and Fahadullah alias Abu Fahad, entered the hotel and fired on guests. They took over 143 people hostage and killed at least 32 people during the ensuing 3-day siege.[9][10] The National Security Guard arrived on 27 November, and on 28 November, the terrorists were shot dead by NSG, ending the crisis at the hotel.[11]

A view of Marine Drive and Mumbai skyline from Hotel Trident at dusk

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Oberoi Trident". Emporis.com. Retrieved 3 September 2011.[dead link]
  • ^ "M.S. Oberoi | Famoushotels.org". famoushotels.org.
  • ^ Weinraub, Judith (30 September 1973). "The Hotels That Changed India Tourism". The New York Times.
  • ^ a b "10-year-old link between Oberoi hotel group and Sheraton hotels snaps".
  • ^ "EIH > Company History > Hotels > Company History of EIH - BSE: 500840, NSE: EIHOTEL".
  • ^ "EIH and Hilton Launch Strategic Alliance - Eight Hotels in India Rebranded, Including the Flagship Oberoi Towers in Mumbai, Rebranded as Hilton Towers / April 2004".
  • ^ "Creatively Yours".
  • ^ "Hilton Mumbai to be named Trident Towers". The Economic Times.
  • ^ "Incident Summary". Global Terrorism Database. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  • ^ "Mumbai Terror Attacks: What Happened On 26/11?". Outlook. 26 November 2020. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  • ^ "Cop recounts fight with 26/11 terrorists at Oberoi". Hindustan Times. 22 September 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  • External links[edit]


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