If you’ve ever driven past Altamount Road and looked up—really looked up—you’ll know what awe feels like in your ribcage. Mumbai, for all its noise and neon, pauses for just a second when Antilia slices
the sky. It isn’t merely a building; it’s a whisper of wealth, a billboard of power, and a structure that turns even locals into tourists. Towering at 568 feet, this Rs 15,000 crore (approx. USD 1.8 billion) vertical palace is home to Mukesh and Nita Ambani, who could live anywhere in the world and yet choose to live not just in Mumbai, but in one particular stretch of sky—the 27th floor. And now, thanks to Nita Ambani herself, we finally know why. This is not a tale of chandeliers dripping like waterfalls or rooms carved in gold leaf. It is a story of something simpler, softer, almost startlingly human. Light. Air. Warmth. And a home suspended between luxury and logic. Before we unpack that surprising truth, let’s take you through the only house in India where snow falls indoors, three helipads wait on standby, and flowers—and marble—get priority over temperature preferences. Yes, this is Antilia, but not as popular gossip paints it. This is Antilia as lived, loved, and designed.
The AC Rumour Everyone Repeated—And the Truth Hidden Beneath It
For years, social media buzzed with a claim: Antilia has no ACs. It sounded outrageous, impossible, even smug. How could the richest family in India choose sweat over cold air? But like most rumours, the truth sits somewhere in the middle. Antilia does not use the kind of air-conditioning you and I know. There are no bulky outdoor units hanging off its façade—because, aesthetically, they would puncture the symmetry of glass, marble and steel. Instead, the mansion runs on a centralised climate system, intricately calibrated to maintain preservation-friendly temperatures for interiors—especially marble, foliage and floral décor. Cool enough to protect stone, but not adjustable for individual comfort. Actor Shreya Dhanwanthary once revealed during a fashion shoot that she politely asked to increase the temperature after feeling cold—only to be denied. The building manager explained, quite matter-of-factly, that the temperature inside is set for the architecture, not the occupants. Beauty first, biology later. In Antilia, even air is designed.
So, Why Live on the 27th Floor? Nita Ambani Answers The One Question India Keeps Asking
For decades, people speculated everything—from vastu alignment to symbolism to sheer luxury. But the truth, shared by Nita Ambani, is astonishingly uncomplicated. Light. Ventilation. Nature. Up there, 27 floors above the densest city in India, sunlight pours in unobstructed. Sea breeze slips through like silk. Noise shrinks. Pollution thins. Morning light hits the windows like a blessing, not an accident. Nita Ambani wanted a home that breathed. Not a skyscraper. A family space in the clouds. At that height, the family enjoys a 360-degree Arabian Sea panorama, cleaner air, and a sense of removal from Mumbai’s frantic pulse. Elevation becomes peace. Sky becomes privacy. And luxury becomes, for once, a backdrop—not the point.
Who Shares The Top Floor With The Power Couple?
The 27th floor isn’t only for Mukesh and Nita Ambani. It is home to the core Ambani clan, including: Akash Ambani, his wife Shloka Mehta, and their children Prithvi and Veda Anant Ambani and Radhika Merchant, now married and part of the future legacy Access is limited. Very limited. Only family and a handful of trusted aides enter that upper sanctum. It is less a residence and more a private sky-nest—warm, close-knit, and guarded like royalty.
Yes, There’s Snow. Real Snow. In Mumbai.
Forget blasting the aircon. The Ambanis have a room where artificial snow falls from the walls. Imagine stepping off a humid Mumbai afternoon and walking into winter. The snow room is engineered to mimic sub-zero atmospheres, offering the family a white, icy escape without needing to fly to Switzerland. It is indulgent, whimsical, and entirely real. Alongside it sit: - A ballroom glittering with rare chandeliers - Marble-clad pools - A private temple where silence is sacred - A cinema, spa, salon, multi-storey gardens - Over 600 staff members ensuring round-the-clock perfection - 3 helipads, because landing on a road is pedestrian - and—delightfully—a private ice-cream parlour Luxury everywhere, but purpose threaded through it. Antilia isn’t excess for the sake of excess. It is curated splendour.
A Home Named After Myth. A Legacy Built in Glass.
Few know that Antilia is named after Antillia—a legendary island sailors believed existed in the Atlantic. A utopia. A dreamland. A land one could spend a lifetime chasing but never reach. What an apt name for a home most will only ever see from the outside. Because Antilia isn’t merely a house—it’s inheritance, identity, and an idea of eternity. It stands as one of the most expensive private residences on Earth, but beyond its opulence lies a tender truth: Even billionaires choose sunlight over chandeliers. Even power families choose fresh air over artificial cold. Even skyscrapers become homes only when filled with warmth, family, and laughter. The Ambanis built themselves a kingdom. But they live like a family—together, high above the world, where the air is clean and the light is kind.
Closing Thought—If You Were Building a Dream Home, What Would Your Snow Room Be?
A chocolate fountain staircase? A moonlit rooftop library? A room where it rains poetry? Antilia challenges imagination and reminds us that homes aren’t defined by their marble—they're defined by what the family inside chooses to value. And the Ambanis, for all their unimaginable wealth, chose sunlight, air, and togetherness. Tell me—if you lived in a palace of clouds, would you choose the top floor too?m