Mumbai Maha Mahotsav – KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India edition

Source: CNCF

#☁️ 基础设施

Welcome to Mumbai – the City of Dreams, where ambition is the only dress code – and the host city for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India 2026.

As a co-chair of this year’s program, I’ve spent months thinking about what makes this edition of KubeCon + CloudNativeCon special. And the more I think about it, the more I believe the city itself is part of the answer.

This post is for everyone traveling to Mumbai for the conference. Whether you’re flying in from Bengaluru or Berlin, here is everything you need to make the most of your time in this extraordinary city.

A city that never sleeps

Mumbai’s Sassoon Dock starts around 3am and moves over tonnes of seafood every single day, sustaining livelihoods in the surrounding supply chain. By the time most of the city has had its morning chai, Sassoon Dock has already been running for five hours.

The local train network, carrying millions of passengers a day, one of the busiest suburban rail systems in the world, starts before dawn and runs close to midnight.

A wikipedia image of a Mumbai train

Source: Wikipedia

Those trains are also the reason dabbawalas can deliver thousands home-cooked lunches to offices across the city every weekday, with an error rate of roughly one mistake per six million deliveries.

No GPS. No tracking app. Just a colour-coded alphanumeric system on each tiffin box, local train timing, and a cooperative trust that has been doing this since 1890. It is the kind of operational precision that would make a senior SRE genuinely emotional.

Mumbai and technology

Today, the city powers some of India’s largest banks, stock exchanges, payment platforms, OTT services, and enterprise systems. That creates a strong engineering culture around uptime, observability, infrastructure automation, and security.

Cloud native technologies are deeply tied to real-world operational demands here, whether it is handling financial transactions during market hours, scaling streaming platforms during live sports events, or supporting logistics networks that run 24/7.

Planning your visit

KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India [June 18 -19] – brings together adopters and technologists from leading open source and cloud native communities by Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF)

Venue

The conference takes place at the Jio World Convention Centre (JWCC), Bandra Kurla Complex (BKC), Mumbai which is one of the most modern convention facilities in Asia.

Weather and packing

Pack light, quick-dry fabrics. Bring a compact umbrella – not optional. Waterproof sandals or shoes you don’t mind getting soaked are a better choice than sneakers. A small dry bag or zip-lock pouches for your phone and laptop are worth having.

Here’s the thing about Mumbai monsoon rains though: they are genuinely spectacular. Watching the Arabian Sea turn grey-green from the Marine Drive promenade during a heavy shower is one of those experiences that stays with you.

For real-time weather updates, follow the India Meteorological Department Mumbai and regional weather handles on X.

Getting around the city

Mumbai’s local transport ecosystem is layered and fascinating once you understand it.

  • Metro: The Mumbai Metro network is fast, air-conditioned, and very affordable. Useful for conference-goers staying in the western suburbs or Bandra area.
  • Local Train: The suburban rail network is the city’s true lifeline – extraordinarily fast and inexpensive, but very crowded during peak hours.
  • Uber / Ola / Rapido: Widely available and generally reliable. Auto-rickshaws are available in suburbs; metered and good for short distances.
  • BEST Buses: Extensive network with AC options; useful once you know the routes.

Pro tip: BKC itself is walkable and pleasant. Most conference hotels are a short cab ride away. But plan for traffic and always leave extra time for any cross-city trip.

Things to do in Mumbai

Once you are all inspired and motivated with the technical energy vibe at the conference programs, it’s time to soak in the cultural energy vibe of Mumbai. Here’s where to start.

Exploring

Living in Mumbai gives an opportunity to enjoy the beaches of Kashid and the mountains of Lonavala. I have explored both these horizons on opposite sides in an hour ride from Mumbai via road.

Gateway of India

Built in 1924, this basalt arch on the Apollo Bunder waterfront is Mumbai’s defining symbol. Come at dusk – the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel behind you, the harbour ahead.

A wikipedia photo image of the Apollo Bunder waterfront

Source: Wikipedia

Lonavala (day trip – 80km from Mumbai, roughly 1.5 – 2 hours by road)

A hill station nestled in the Sahyadris, Lonavala is Mumbai’s favourite escape from the city’s heat and noise. Dramatic monsoon waterfalls, green valleys, and the famous chikki make it well worth the trip if you have a free day.

Bollywood Park – Film City Mumbai

Film City in Goregaon is where a significant chunk of Bollywood has been made – and Bollywood Park is the official, authorised way to experience it. The 2-3 hour guided tour takes you through live shooting sets, TV serial backdrops, and iconic locations.

Food

Mumbai’s food culture deserves its own article, but here are the essentials.

Street Food – You Cannot Miss This

Mumbai’s street food is a civic institution. The vada pav – a spiced potato fritter inside a soft bread roll, dressed with green chutney and dry garlic powder, is the city’s unofficial mascot. Best near Dadar station. Another one is Pav Bhaji Buttery spiced vegetable mash with toasted rolls, finished with lime. Chowpatty Beach at dusk is the classic setting.

Cafés

Mumbai’s café culture runs on two parallel tracks: the old Irani cafés that have barely changed in a century, and a newer specialty coffee scene that has exploded over the last decade. Both are worth your time.

  • Leopold Café – A Colaba institution since 1871. Bullet holes in the wall from the 2008 attacks, cold beer, decent food, and the kind of energy that comes from 150 years of travellers passing through. Go once.
  • Kyani & Co. – One of the last great Irani cafés, open since 1904 near Marine Lines. Brun maska, chai, and a booth where you could sit for hours. Entirely unchanged, and better for it.
  • Café Mondegar – Colaba’s beloved neighbourhood café, famous for its Mario Miranda murals covering every wall. Cold Kingfisher, jukebox, and an atmosphere that feels irreplaceable.

Breweries

BKC and the surrounding area have a solid craft beer scene, very convenient for post-session unwinding.

  • Doolally Taproom – From India’s oldest microbrewery. Laid-back vibe, board games, Belgian Witbier and Apple Cider on tap. The Andheri outpost is the one to visit.
A google photo image of food and beer.

Source: Google Photos By Owner of Doolally

  • Gateway Taproom BKC – One of Mumbai’s original craft breweries, right inside BKC. Known for White Zen, Doppelganger, and a food menu serious enough to make it a dinner destination.
  • British Brewing Company – A British pub in the middle of India’s financial district. Solid range of beers, cosy wooden interiors, good for a long evening.

🍽️ Restaurants

If you’re going to splurge on dinner in Mumbai, these are the rooms worth dressing up for.

A google photo restaurant image by Golden Dragon

Source: Google Photos by Golden Dragon

  • Gaylord Restaurant – A Mumbai institution since 1956, in Churchgate. Continental and North Indian classics in an old-world setting that predates every other restaurant on this list. The kind of place that reminds you this city has always been cosmopolitan.
  • Ziya – The Oberoi Mumbai – Contemporary Indian fine dining above Marine Drive, with views of the Queen’s Necklace. Refined, inventive, and one of the most elegant dining rooms in the city.

5 talks to look out for

Amachi Mumbai awaits you

Register for KubeCon before the tickets are sold out, just like last year!

I have been co-chairing this year’s KubeCon India for months now, and I want to be honest with you about why I think you should come. I moved here from Chennai two years ago, and Mumbai still surprises me. The city has a way of making you feel like your ambitions are reasonable – that if you have a good idea and are willing to work for it, the city will make room for you. That energy is contagious, and it will be in the room at KubeCon.

Whether you are here for platform engineering, AI infrastructure or supply chain security – there is substance on the schedule that you will find for yourself. The project pavilion booths will give you a chance to network with people powering your infrastructure and understand their motivation. But beyond the sessions, there is something harder to put into words. The Women’s community gathering welcomes everyone who wants to share their journey and inspire others.I will be speaking at MCP Dev Summit, giving a keynote and co-chairing at KubeCon. Come and say hi. We can talk about Open Source, Cloud Native, Security, AI Assisted Development, Food, Women in Cloud Native or my personal favourite, Motherhood. You can always reach out to me on LinkedIn.

See you in Mumbai 🚀