Charnock's city sloughs off old skin. High life zips in: skyscrapers, malls, resto-bars et al.
Says CII's regional chairman and MD, Patton Group, Sanjay Budhia: "This government is perhaps full of good intent, but poor perception is a spoiler." Adds he: "So when I tell investors that I run a factory of 800 workers and I haven't lost a single manday in all these years, they do sit up and listen."
The CM's image-building backroom boys include young, laptop-carrying bureaucrats like Atri 'presentations' Bhattacharya, executive director of the West Bengal Industrial Development Corporation that sells Bengal through a smartly-produced dossier with an extensive section on eating out in Calcutta. "Quality of life is our main pitch," he says.
The presentations are clicking. "Every year, over the past three years, upwards of Rs 2,000 crore domestic investments have flown in," says a beaming industry minister Nirupam Sen. Behind him, on the wall are framed portraits of Lenin and Tagore and in front is a top-of-the line pda. Sen has, to his credit, revived the iron and steel sector with 54 projects (total investments Rs 6,982 crore up to 2003) in the state and is focusing on food and agro and IT/ITES along with it.
The Salt Lake electronic complex is booming at a steady rate of 119 per cent, where 175 companies in IT and BPO are raking in business from across the globe. The view from one of the tallest buildings in the area is of glass-fronted global business centres with majors like Tata Consultancy Services, PWC, Wipro, IBM, Computer Associates, AIG, Siemens, Reliance Infocomm and Cognizant Technology. Siddhartha Mukherjee, head of Calcutta operations, Cognizant, is thrilled: "We have been able to scale up our operations pretty fast and service our blue-chip customer base in the US and Europe without any hiccups."
Mukherjee represents a new crop of professionals—another set of poster boys for a revivalist city—triggering boom, pushing for change and creating the demand for better living. Better infrastructure (new flyovers, extension of the metro rail), better quality of life and real estate. The result is visible in big-ticket building projects all over.The prime mover was Harsh Neotia, managing director, Bengal Ambuja group, who introduced the joint-venture concept of condos in the state. Now, at least half-a-dozen of them are in different stages of construction. Says Neotia, the most visible face among the change-makers: "Actually, we were too reticent, too shy to talk about the good things, now there is a realisation that showcasing is important."
He is, clearly, the role model for a new breed of honorary Bengali entrepreneurs—Sumit Dabriwala, Rahul Saraf, Pradeep Chopra and Pradeep Sureka to name a few—all of them betting on the future of Calcutta. Smart, well-educated, well-travelled, hard working, they speak impeccable Bengali and wear their love for Calcutta on their Armani sleeves. "We have an obsessive passion to sell this city in our work, and often, we sell it together," says Dabriwala, developer of Highland Park.
The 2-lakh square feet Forum mall on Elgin Road is now the preferred hangout destination of the young and aspiring. Says Rahul Saraf, the developer: "When I went marketing Forum, people were sceptical. When I actually flew down the owner of Bizarre to give her an idea of life in Calcutta, she was amazed to find that many young women in the nightclubs were in her creations. Today every space is taken." Shopper's Stop is the anchor store, with Nike, Lacoste, Swarovski, Amoretto, Ritu Kumar, Bizarre, Anokhi and Be being other attractions. Plus a food court and a four-screen multiplex, Inox.
The 6.5-acre Charles Correa-designed City Centre in Salt Lake, with a four-screen multiplex, a designer residency, a shopping mall with food court, banquet hall and an entertainment arena, will be ready in a couple of months. Kishore Biyani—inventor of the hypermart in India—intends to open up the third Pantaloons store and will be adding to the two Big Bazaars. Shopper's Stop too plans two more stores in Calcutta. "The Park Street Music World does the most business among all our stores in India," says Goenka. Encouraged by the retail boom, the group is starting up Giant, a hypermart.
Actually, the good life is now upon the city with a vengeance. No stand-alone club was set up in Calcutta for 25 years, but four have been added in the past three years. Until the turn of the century, Calcutta had no spa. By the end of 2003, it had six along with Solace, the only health club with a Reebok studio in east India. For two decades, no new upmarket restaurant opened shop, but the last few years have seen at least 25. One stand-alone coffee bar existed here until 1999, now there are 10 plus. Calcutta had barely a couple of Italian restaurants until the mid-'90s, today there are at least 12.
Says homemaker Paromita Chowdhury: "I really look forward to the weekends now as we always eat out or do takeaways. Reason? There is such a vast range to choose from." Every locality—even staid North Calcutta—now has restaurants and franchised outlets of Domino's, Shiraz, Rehemania, Shabir's and a dozen other value-for-money options. And whereas eating out at places such as Oh Calcutta! and Grain of Salt—gourmet menus that cost up to Rs 1,200 for two—would have been unthinkable for Calcuttans on a regular basis in the past, there are queues outside both places today. At Sheesha, a hookah bar on top of 22 Camac Street, Meetu Jain, a pierced and streaked young lady who has come to sway to the r&b funky progressive beat this Wednesday night, is taking cool drags from her Rs 400-an-hour, mint-flavoured hookah. "It's my birthday, I get to do what I want," she says.
Astor Hotel's Cloud Nine is swinging to rock, lounge and hip-hop as young men and women troop in from different clubbing destinations on a Saturday night. "We started as a resto-pub, but as clubbing caught on more and more people would take to the dance floor.So, we changed our profile," says the manager.
We head for Someplace Else. Incognito, London Pub, Big Ben and, of course, Tantra, we are told, are absolute musts. While Someplace Else, our previous stop, is the domain of the 30-plus, double-deck Tantra's seriously young. Suddenly, the music stops and Natasha from Dubai hops into the bar area. What follows is the most audacious pole-dance performance one is likely to come across anywhere east of Persia.
Actually, for long Calcutta has been trying to do the pole vault. Poor perception, which always takes time to catch up with reality, has been the problem. Regressive responses from the Left on processions don't help, as the decade-old image of Calcutta sticks on. During the CM's Mumbai road show, the ceo of a pharma major asked: "Doesn't Calcutta have a terrible power problem?"
Says Cognizant's Mukherjee: "The intrinsic brand equity of Calcutta is experienced more by people within, rather than outside." To address this, the Indian Chamber of Commerce has a special "perception committee". Neotia is optimistic it'll work: "The momentum has caught on, all we need to do is to play our notes right and we can create a beautiful symphony."