Dressed in white kurta-pyjamas and Gandhi topis, Mumbai’s dabbawalas have become a fixture in the city's urban choreography. Moving through busy city streets and packed suburban trains, they operate in step with Mumbai’s daily rhythm, delivering nearly 200,000 home-cooked meals each day with remarkable precision. Their famously low-tech, colour-coded system—still run without digital tools—has attracted global attention, including a 2010 Harvard Business School case study.
India
Step Inside Mumbai’s First Museum Dedicated To Its Famous Dabbawalas
Step inside the Mumbai Dabbawala Experience Centre, where history meets innovation. From VR simulations to holograms and AI-powered avatars, the exhibit brings to life one of the world’s most efficient, low-tech delivery systems

Mumbai’s dabbawalas have been delivering home-cooked meals in tiffin boxes across the city for over a century
Photo: amnat30/Shutterstock
Mumbai’s dabbawalas have been delivering home-cooked meals in tiffin boxes across the city for over a century
Photo: amnat30/Shutterstock

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