Happy Weekend Chembur Family
There’s been a lot happening in Chembur lately. Development has been the constant refrain, measured in projects, plans, and announcements.
What’s spoken about far less is what a good life here actually looks like, because a good life isn’t measured in documents. It’s measured in how our days feel, mornings at home, school drop-offs, the ease or effort of getting around, long workdays, quiet evenings, and weekends spent around the neighbourhood.
So this weekend, we’re pausing the usual updates and asking a simple question. When you think of a “good life” in Chembur, what does it include?
Chembur means different things to different people. What one family prioritises may not matter as much to another. For some, it’s safety. For others, it’s good schools nearby. For many, it’s access to healthcare, green spaces, a sense of community, or simply less friction in daily life.
There’s no correct answer here. Just a personal one.
But taken together, these perspectives quietly shape how neighbourhoods evolve, what gets valued and what people choose to stay for, or move away from.
Why this is worth thinking about
Most of us carry a quiet definition of what a good life here looks like, but rarely say it out loud. If a line, a thought, or even a small detail came to mind while reading this, just hit reply and share it.
No formatting. No overthinking.
Your perspective helps shape what this community pays attention to, and what quietly gets ignored.
At its core
A good place to live isn’t defined on paper. It’s defined by lived experience. This edition is simply an invitation to reflect.
Would love to know how you think about this.

