Tata wants to sell its new $7,800 Nano homes to India’s slum dwellers
May 8th, 2009

It looks like Tata -- the company behind the $2,000 Nano car and India's no-frills 218 square feet and 373 square feet.
I just got off the phone with Tata Housing Managing Director and CEO Brotin Banerjee in Mumbai, who gave me some more details.
The company will start work in about a month on its first low-cost housing project in the industrial area of Boisar, about 60 miles or 2.5 hours by train from Mumbai (Long commutes are common in the city, which has horrendous traffic). Tata plans also to roll out similar projects in major cities across India. The idea is to target the bottom of the pyramid -- the largest group of consumers -- now largely untapped.
In addition to the low-cost housing, Tata will build more than 2,000 units on the same 60-acre development for $20,000 to $40,000. Banerjee said having the higher-cost housing would make the overall project more profitable.
"There's a shortage of 24 million homes in India and the bulk of them are in urban areas," Banerjee said.
The project will consist of three-story cement buildings with 6 homes on each floor. The development would have a hospital, schools, community center, and parks.
Banerjee said he hopes other large developers follow Tata's lead.
"If larger players enter the field, it will only be good for everybody," he said. "There's enough demand and I don't see very much competition in this space.'
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