Visitors and especially school children flocked to see the exhibition which had heritage stations, working models of railway engines and steam locomotives on display.
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“We organised this exhibition because we wanted the youth to see what Railways was like in old times,” said the Chief Public Relations Officer of western Indian railways, Ravinder Bhakar.
A majority of Mumbai's working population depends on suburban railways as the city faces long traffic jams, lacks parking spaces and has poor road conditions.
(With inputs from ANI)
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