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Sunday, August 18, 2019

Inside Pictures Of Mukesh Ambani And Nita Ambani's Luxurious 2 Billion Dollar Home, Antilia

Inside Pictures Of Mukesh Ambani And Nita Ambani's Luxurious 2 Billion Dollar Home, Antilia


As rightly said by Mrs Nita Ambani, Antilia is the quintessential example of a “modern home with an Indian heart”. World's second most expensive private residential property, Antilia is named after the mythic island ‘Antillia’ and is owned by one of the richest men in Asia and the eighteenth richest man of the world (January, Forbes), Mukesh Ambani.
Mukesh Ambani with his wife, Nita Ambani and children, Anant Ambani, Akash Ambani and Isha Ambani live in their palatial abode, Antilia which is located in South Mumbai’s Altamount Road. Antilia is estimated to be world's second most expensive property after London’s prestigious Buckingham Palace. Mukesh and Nita’s heavenly mansion costs an estimated $1-2 billion.
World’s renowned business tycoon, Mukesh Ambani’s breathtaking 27-storey skyscraper reaches 570 feet with over 400,000 square feet of interior space against the Mumbai skyline. Let us take you to the tour and some interesting facts about the world's first billion-dollar home.
Antilia, the finest form of architecture, is designed by Chicago-based architects Perkins and Will, and an Australian-based construction company, Leighton Holdings took the charge of its construction. Every floor of the building is the same height of an average 2-storey building which gives the feel of a 40-storey building. The architectural design of Antilia makes it strong enough to survive an earthquake of 8 on the Richter scale.
The architectural design is based on lotus and sun and the top six floors of Ambani’s home have been set aside as the private full-floor residential area. Antilia comes with a mega-temple, a host of guest suites, lounges, a salon, an ice-cream parlour and a private movie theatre to accommodate 50 people.
Then another six floors are dedicated to cars as Mukesh Ambani has a huge need for speed, including his Rs 5 crore Maybach. In fact, the garage has the capacity to accommodate 168 cars and it has a dedicated car service station on the seventh floor.
Antilia also has 9 high-speed elevators and each of them is assigned to different floors and purpose. Two of the elevators are designated for the parking areas, three for the guest quarters, two of them for the Ambani family residences and two for the service. The lobby of Antilia opens to diverse lounges, reception areas and powder rooms, and it has dual stairways that lead to the ballroom.
Antilia ballroom is designed in an open layout with a two-story roof and the most astonishing features of the ballroom are the crystal chandeliers that takes up approximately 80% of the ceiling. A kitchen, almost the size of the ballroom, can serve hundreds of guests. The ballroom also has a stage for entertainment purpose or speeches, the silver staircase leads to the central landing behind which the two retractable doors open to the display works of art.
The countless lounges in Antilia offer a quiet escape to the Reliance Industries guests. Chandeliers, finely woven and crafted Indian rugs and opulently crafted mirrors are the common features of the traditional lounges at Ambanis. For the modern lounge, the furniture, floors, lines and dark woods give it more of a minimalistic approach than other lounges in Antilia.  
Ambani’s have a full-fledged theatre in Antilia which includes a wine room, a snack bar and couches and tables to fill up the room. And to beat the grimy Mumbai summer, Ambani’s have a snow room in their mansion, to beat the heat, in which the walls spit out man-made snowflakes. The outdoor level features a lap pool with lounge chairs shaded by trees and Jacuzzi that take in views of the city skyline. And the interior space is filled with yoga and dance studios, changing rooms for men and women, gyms, spas and a solarium with a juice bar.
The top floor of Antilia includes a covered and an outdoor entertaining space with the panoramic views of the Mumbai skyline as well as the Arabian Sea. The most jaw-dropping feature of Antilia is that it has three helipads on the terrace along with an air space floor.
Antilia requires more than 600 full-time staff members to maintain this flawless mansion. Surprisingly, the Ambanis are vegetarian and teetotalers, so the meals are pure vegetarian and alcohol-free. The wine is only served during the cocktail hours.
This house of Mukesh Ambani has a 4-storey open atrium of gardens, flowers and lawns. The environment-friendly garden includes the hanging hydroponic plants and the fixed trees which are energy-saving devices. They absorb the sunlight and in turn keep the indoors cool in summers and warm in winters. These hydroponically grown plants limit the need for air-conditioning. Antilia also has a huge temple and has large statues of Hindu gods Ganesha and Shiva. No two floors in Antilia are the same.
The magazine, Vanity Fair gave a sneak peek of Antilia in their June 2012 edition and an interview with Nita Ambani. The magazine was quoted as:

Founder Chairman

Founder Chairman


Dhirubhai Ambani (28 December 1932 – 6 July 2002) epitomised the dauntless entrepreneurial spirit of a visionary always on the march to change the destiny of a nation. Acclaimed as the top businessman of the 20th century and lauded for his dynamic, pioneering and innovative genius, Dhirubhai was an inspiring leader with sterling qualities. His success story fired the imagination of a generation of Indian entrepreneurs, business leaders and progressive companies. For many, he still remains an icon, a role model to be emulated.
Dhirubhai’s unique vision redefined the potential of the Indian corporate sector and he challenged conventional wisdom in several areas. He was probably the first Indian businessman to recognise the strategic significance of investors and discover the vast untapped potential of the capital markets and channelize it for the growth and development of industry. The corporate philosophy he followed was short, simple and succinct: “Think big. Think differently. Think fast. Think ahead. Aim for the best.” It was under Dhirubhai’s visionary leadership the Reliance Group emerged as the largest business conglomerate in India, and carved out a distinct place for itself in the global pantheon of corporate giants.
During the course of his entrepreneurial mission, Dhirubhai set a number of revolutionary precedents. His contributions to the social and economic development of the nation were many and recognised by numerous national and international organisations. He was honoured with the Padma Vibhushan – India's second highest civilian honour – in 2016, for his ‘exceptional and distinguished’ service to trade and industry. Many other prestigious awards and titles have been conferred on him, including the Lifetime Achievement Award (The Economic Times), Man of the Century (Chemtech Foundation), Indian Entrepreneur of the 20th Century (FICCI), and many more.
He visualised the growth of Reliance as an integral part of his grand vision for India. He was convinced that India could become an economic superpower within a short period of time and wanted Reliance to play an important role in realising this goal. Today, the Group's turnover represents nearly 3 percent of India's GDP.

Chairman & Managing Director

Chairman & Managing Director


Mr. Mukesh D. Ambani (DIN 00001695) is a Chemical Engineer from the Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai (erstwhile the University Department of Chemical Technology, University of Mumbai). He pursued an MBA from Stanford University in the US. He has been on the Board of Reliance since 1977. He initiated Reliance’s backward integration journey – from textiles to polyester fibres and further onto petrochemicals and petroleum refining, and going upstream into oil and gas exploration and production. He created multiple new world-class manufacturing facilities involving diverse technologies that have raised Reliance’s petrochemicals manufacturing capacities from less than a million tonnes to about 21 million tonnes per year.
In the late nineties, Mr. Mukesh Ambani spearheaded the creation of the world’s largest grassroots petroleum refinery at Jamnagar in Gujarat, India, with a capacity of 660,000 barrels per day (33 million tonnes a year), and integrated it with petrochemicals, power generation, port and related infrastructure. Further, he steered the setting up of another 580,000-barrels-per-day refinery next to the first one in Jamnagar. With an aggregate refining capacity of 1.24 million barrels of oil per day at a single location, Jamnagar has become the refining hub of the world.
He also led Reliance’ development of infrastructure facilities and implementation of a pan-India organized retail network spanning multiple formats and supply chain infrastructure. Today, Reliance Retail is the largest organised retail player in India. He has created global records in customer acquisition for Jio, Reliance’ digital services initiative. He led and established one of the world’s most expansive 4G broadband wireless network offering end-to-end solutions that address the entire value chain across various digital services in key domains of national interest, such as education, healthcare, security, financial services, government-citizen interfaces, and entertainment.
Mr. Mukesh Ambani is a member of The Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum. He is an elected Foreign Member of the prestigious United States National Academy of Engineering. He is a member of the Global Advisory Council of Bank of America. He is also a member of International Advisory Council of The Brookings Institution.
Mr. Ambani is also a member of the following forums:
  • Stanford Global Advisory Council
  • McKinsey & Company International Advisory Council
  • The Business Council
  • Chairman of the Board of Governors, Pandit Deendayal Petroleum University in Gujarat
  • India Advisory Group of the London School of Economics
  • India Advisory Council of The British Asian Trust (as Chairman)
  • Indo-U.S. CEOs’ Forum
  • Board of Governors of the National Council of Applied Economic Research, India