Dhobi Ghat: Mumbai’s laundromat

The world's largest open-air laundry: 700 families, operating since the 1890s, no machinery. Most visitors stay at the railing. The real thing is below.

Dhobi Ghat: Mumbai’s Laundromat

Most visitors to Mumbai have heard of Dhobi Ghat without quite knowing what it is. The short answer is that it’s the world’s largest open-air laundry, a vast complex of concrete wash pens near Mahalaxmi station where an estimated 700 families live and work, cleaning the linen of the city’s hotels, hospitals and households by hand, every single day. It has been operating since the 1890s. The city generates an extraordinary amount of dirty laundry, and Dhobi Ghat has been dealing with it since before the internal combustion engine existed.

Most people stand at the railing on the viewing platform looking down. I understand the impulse. The view is already something: hundreds of wash pens laid out below you, each one occupied, a city’s worth of laundry moving through human hands at a pace that makes no sense until you stop trying to take it all in at once.

I went down anyway.

The noise hits you first: the rhythmic slap of wet cloth against stone, workers calling across to each other, the hiss of steam from somewhere you can’t quite locate. Each dhobi works his designated pen with the kind of precision that only comes from doing the same thing for years, scrubbing, wringing, flinging garments with what looks almost like choreography. Nobody paid me much attention. This was their workplace, not a performance.

What stays with me is the scale of it. Thousands of garments a day, almost no machinery, just hands and water and muscle. The linens of Mumbai’s hotels and hospitals, cleaned and returned, day after day. Each dhobi family typically owns or leases their wash pen, and the trade passes from father to son. Some families have been working the same pens for three generations. I filmed as I walked, trying to catch something of the texture that you simply can’t see from above: the narrow channels between pens, the stacks of sorted cloth in colors that shouldn’t survive repeated washing but somehow do.

A young dhobi caught the camera, grinned, went straight back to work.

Getting down into the complex is straightforward enough. You leave the viewing bridge, take the steps down to street level and walk in. There’s no ticket, no guided tour, no rope to duck under. The other visitors stayed at the railing. I seemed to be the only one who went down.

Dhobi Ghat gets described as a dying institution, the commercial laundries and domestic washing machines supposedly finishing it off. The numbers have certainly fallen from their peak. But on the morning I was there, it showed no sign of slowing down. If anything it felt busier than anything I’d seen in the city above it.

Go down. The real thing is never at railing height.

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