particularly in Bangkok,
tuk-tuks as these three wheeled vehicles are called, are everywhere, and the same is true in India, so when IKEA opened its first Indian store in Hyderabad, complete with a fleet of colourful electric rickshaws for
deliveries, photos on
social media show the branded rickshaws painted in IKEA's signature blue and
yellow, with brightly patterned canopies and cushions, the
three-wheeled vehicles are charged by 4,000 solar panels installed on the new
store's roof, reports
electric vehicle magazine Electrek, like all
rickshaws their narrow dimensions make them suitable for navigating congested
roads and narrow streets, however, these battery-operated vehicles are less
polluting than standard auto rickshaws that run on fossil fuels, the
electric vehicles will make up 20 per cent of the Hyderabad store's
delivery fleet,
excited
customers queued
for hours to visit the shop, causing such large traffic jams
that Hyderabad's traffic police, which blamed the
snarl-up on IKEA for "insufficient parking", had to issue a
warning, rather than
serving up their traditional Swedish delicacy of pork meatballs, the cafe at
India's first IKEA will serve
samosas, chicken balls and biriyani to cater to Hyderabad's majority
Hindu and Muslim population, alongside
firm IKEA favourites such as the Billy bookcase and Lack table,
the 37,161-square metre store will stock culturally relevant products such
as masala boxes, rice cake makers, pressure cookers and a mattress made using
coconut fibres, IKEA in India, wherever next?
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