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Where is the party?

Updated - April 05, 2015 07:30 am IST

Published - March 15, 2015 12:22 am IST

With Mumbai leading the way in promoting an active nightlife, other cities want to follow suit. But businesses and residents from major Indian metropolises need administrative and infrastructural support in order to stay up late.

Photo: Shantanu Das

With Mumbai leading the way in promoting an active nightlife, other cities want to follow suit. But businesses and residents from major Indian metropolises need administrative and infrastructural support in order to stay up late.

 

> The city that ‘never sleeps’

Barring five-star establishments, a majority of Mumbai’s restaurants down their shutters by 11.30 p.m. and bars shut down their operations by 1.30 a.m.

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> Cosmopolitan meets conservative

Despite the chic styling of new Bengaluru, the fiscal genes of the city still remain conservative deterring bar and restaurant owners from actively pursuing an unrestricted nightlife policy

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> Chennai, the new party hub?

Nightlife in the city is still a pursuit of those who belong to the middle and upper-middle class and the rich.

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>Shut down at midnight

When the lights flicker on at bars and clubs across Delhi just past midnight, putting an abrupt end to the party, it’s not difficult to question the city’s idea of nightlife.

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> Youngsters demand more from Hyderabad

For many Hyderabadis and scores of visitors coming here from elsewhere most parts of this 400-year-old city begin to shut down after 10 p.m.

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