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Rain, Roads, and a Star’s Nuptials: The Ambani Convoy’s Pali Hill Gridlock

Ambani convoy seen stuck in rain on way to Aamir's house to attend his wedding | Around 100-150 people have been invited | Inshorts

By Priya NairPublished 5 July 2026· 2 min read
Rain, Roads, and a Star’s Nuptials: The Ambani Convoy’s Pali Hill Gridlock
Rain, Roads, and a Star’s Nuptials: The Ambani Convoy’s Pali Hill Gridlock

Aamir Khan’s intimate Sunday wedding saw the city’s elite caught in a monsoon snarl as heavy rains and fallen branches disrupted the commute to Pali Hill.

The monsoon has a way of leveling the playing field in Mumbai, even for the city’s most influential figures. On Sunday, July 5, as Aamir Khan tied the knot with Gauri Spratt in a private ceremony at his Pali Hill residence, the weather threw a wrench in the plans of his high-profile guests. A convoy belonging to the Ambani family was spotted struggling through waterlogged streets, stalled by heavy rainfall and fallen tree branches that had turned the approach to the actor's home into a chaotic bottleneck.

The wedding, an intimate affair attended by an estimated 100 to 150 guests, marked Aamir Khan’s third marriage. The actor, whose vast real estate portfolio—including a ₹60 crore sea-facing apartment and properties spanning from Panchgani to Beverly Hills—is as widely discussed as his career, opted for a low-key registered ceremony. Despite the weather-induced delays, the guest list featured close associates, including Lagaan director Ashutosh Gowariker, who was seen braving the downpour to make it to the venue.

The Bigger Picture

While the celebrity wedding dominated social media chatter, it serves as a stark reminder of Mumbai’s perennial struggle with infrastructure during the monsoon. When the city’s most powerful figures, including the Ambani family, find their transit hindered by basic civic failures like unpruned trees and flooded arterial roads, it highlights a recurring vulnerability in the urban landscape. For the common Mumbaikar, these disruptions are a daily ordeal, but seeing a high-security convoy brought to a standstill captures the indiscriminate nature of the city’s seasonal collapse.

Beyond the glitz of the wedding, the weekend was defined by contrasting headlines. While the entertainment sector celebrated a quiet union, the education sector faced sobering news. Reports confirmed that 58 engineering colleges across India were shuttered during the 2025-26 academic year, with Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh bearing the brunt of these closures. The juxtaposition of a star-studded event in a locked-down Pali Hill bungalow against the quiet, systemic decline of technical education institutions paints a complex picture of a nation currently navigating its own set of seasonal and structural shifts.

By Priya Nair
Political Correspondent

Priya Nair covers parties, elections and the business of power for PoliticalPedia.