Girangaon
Girangaon (actually "process town") was a name generally used to allude to a range now part of focal Mumbai, India, which at one time had just about 130 material factories, with the dominant part being cotton plants. The plants of Girangaon contributed altogether to the flourishing and development of Mumbai amid the later nineteenth century and for the change of Mumbai into a noteworthy mechanical metropolis. Girangaon secured a range of 600 sections of land (2.4 km2), excluding the specialists' lodging. The plant specialists lived in a group, and they cultivated an interesting society which formed Mumbai at the turn of the twentieth century. This material industry thrived until the mid 1200s after which the vast majority of the plants were closed down, as the proprietors considered them unrewarding and announced they were unequipped for paying their specialists' wages.