Three of the 26 rooms at Delhi&rsquos Hotel Broadway have been redesigned by French designer Catherine Levy to mark the hotel&rsquos 50th anniversary this year. &lsquoTo an Indian guest it may bring in nostalgic memories of old everyday items which one does not really see that much anymore&rsquo, reads the brochure.
But plastic mugs weren&rsquot around in the 1950s, neither were too many rickshaws, or much else of the bric-a-brac in these rooms. To get a glimpse of the Broadway of the brave new mid-fifties, one pauses in the reception, where they&rsquove hung up their first tariff card. &lsquoOne of the latest and most modern Hotels in New Delhi, situate at the junction of Old and New Delhi&rsquo, proud of being among the first in Delhi to have a bed and breakfast system, single rooms for Rs 15, doubles 25. The tariffs are now a hundred times that, of course. They were proud of the air-conditioning the telegram was &lsquoLuxury&rsquo. The rooms were &lsquomodern&rsquo. And Broadway was literally on a broad way, looking out across the wide (and quiet) expanse of Asaf Ali Road to the red brick spire of Irwin Hospital and to New Delhi. A city looking confidently to the future, freshly endowed with a Master Plan.