Jamshedpur gave birth to Telco (now Tata Motors [Get
Quote<http://money.rediff.com/money/jsp/quote_process.jsp?query=tata
motors ltd>
]) which has just launched the low-cost Nano; Jamshedpur, according to the
35-year old Tata Housing Development Company managing director Brotin
Banerjee, is what inspired Tata Housing to launch its Shubh Griha low-cost
housing project in Mumbai.

Banerjee has been with Tata Housing for the last two years. For now, the
group will construct 1,000 low-cost houses in Mumbai, and later do another
4,000 over four years in different cities.

Banerjee, who was born and brought up in Jharkhand and has worked with the
Tatas since 1998, says he liked the concept of Jamshedpur, which provided
housing to thousands of employees working with Tata companies and others.
So, he says, he wanted to try and replicate that model in other cities. 'The
Tatas', he says, 'have always worked with the common man in mind. I am just
one of them".

For the record, the Tata Administrative Service officer has been working
with the group on mass-products in the past as well. He began his TAS-life
with Tata Chemicals [Get
Quote<http://money.rediff.com/money/jsp/quote_process.jsp?query=tata
chemicals
ltd>] making salt for the 'common-man' -- one of his first jobs was to help
relaunch the Tata Salt brand.

After launching the 'Tata Namak, Desh ka Namak', he launched 'Samunder', a
low-priced iodised salt aimed at poorer sections of society. He later moved
to Barista Coffee as Vice-President in charge of marketing, strategy and
corporate communications and was also its chief operating officer.

According to Banerjee, the project was a long time in the making and the
team worked with suppliers, designers and others for over a year to come up
with a model which was financially viable -- much the same thing, it appears
in retrospect, that happened when Tata Motors conceived the Nano.

"We had many board and committee meetings discussing financial and
commercial parameters at length. We were able to demonstrate that the
project was feasible", he says.

Will the company's experiment to reach to the bottom of the pyramid be
financially viable when the economy is slowing down, and how will the entry
of builders such as Unitech and Omaxe in this very segment affect the Tata
project?

"Why not?" counters Banerjee. "There is a shortage of 24 million houses in
the country in mid- and lower-income segments, and that cannot be bridged by
the government unless there is private sector participation", he argues.

The similarities with the Nano, of course, don't end here. The Shubh Griha
project, like the Nano, is likely to add more to the buzz around the company
than it will to its bottomline. In the next four years, if all goes well, it
will contribute just around 5 per cent to Tata Housing's revenues.
For the rest, the company is banking on mid-income and premium housing
projects, IT parks, malls, office complexes and so on. In the same manner
that Tata Motors is counting on the truck market to lift its fortunes.
http://business.rediff.com/special/2009/may/11/guest-meet-the-man-behind-nano-houses-project.htm

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