Marina Beach ( merina ) is a natural urban beach in the city of
Chennai, India, along the
Bay of Bengal, part of the
Indian Ocean The beach runs from near
Fort St. George in the north to
Besant Nagar in the south, a distance of 13 km (
8.1 mi), making it the longest natural urban beach in the country and the world's second longest.
The Marina is primarily sandy, unlike the short, rocky formations that make up the
Juhu Beach in
Mumbai. The average width of the beach is
300 m (980 ft) and the width at the widest stretch is 437 m (1,434 ft). Bathing and swimming at the Marina Beach are legally prohibited because of the dangers, as the undercurrent is very turbulent. It is the most crowded beach in the country and attracts about 30,
000 visitors a day during weekdays and 50,000 visitors a day during the weekends and on holidays. During summer months, about 15,000 to 20,000 people visit the beach daily. In
2010, 18 percent of 5,000 respondents interviewed by a Tripadvisor
Survey voted this beach as a dirty beach, way behind
Juhu beach in
Maharashtra which was voted
India's dirtiest by 65% of the respondents
Being the city's primary area for recreation, the entire stretch features numerous statues and monuments that have come up over the years along the beach promenade, called
Kamarajar Salai. While the beach stretches along the eastern side of the road, the western side is dotted with various governmental institutions and historic and stately buildings from the
British rule all along its length.
Victory War Memorial, a memorial for the warriors who lost their lives in the
World Wars, marks the northern end of the beach. Memorials for
C. N. Annadurai and
M. G. Ramachandran, former
Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu, are present on the northern end of the promenade known as the
Anna Square. All along the length of the promenade, stone statues adorn the roadside area of the beach starting from the
Triumph of Labour statue, the first statue erected in the beach, near the memorials at the Anna Square to
Mahatma Gandhi statue near the lighthouse. Most statues are of national or local legends while others have symbolic significance like the Triumph of Labour statue. The statues along the promenade are (from north to south)
Marina Beach lies on the stretch of coast where olive ridley sea turtles, a species classified as
Schedule 1 of the
Indian Wildlife Protection Act of
1972 (critically endangered), nest during mating season, chiefly between late October and April peaking from mid-January to mid-February. The
Ennore–
Mamallapuram zone, on which the beach lies, is one of the three major nesting grounds on the
Indian coast. However, with the expansion of the shrimp trawling fishery in the eastern coast of India in the mid-1970s, several individuals of the species are washed ashore dead every year. The eggs laid by the females along the beach are also sold in the local market by the fishermen and traders. In
1977, a recovery programme was started by the
Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute. Many volunteer organisations in the city, such as the Students'
Sea Turtle Conservation Network and the Sea Turtle Protection
Force of the
TREE Foundation, get involved in conservation of the species along the coast.
Meiofaunal composition at the Marina Beach chiefly includes
Common fishes found along the beach in the Bay of Bengal include mullets, sharks, silver bellies, rays, ribbon fish, skates, white bait, dussumeria, jew fish, horse mackerel, crabs, seer, pellona, pomfret, perches, lactarius, lethrius, flying fish, engraylis, sardines, lobsters, sabre fish, barracuda, hilsa, tunny,
Indian salmon, leather jackets, cookup, breams, catfish, snappers, synagris, bonito, soles, polynemus, and prawns, among others.
Since
the creation of the promenade in 1884, there were several additions along the stretch.
The country's first aquarium was established as one of the first additions in
1909. Shortly after the
Independence, the Triumph of Labour statue (reminiscent of the famous
World War II photograph of the
American Marines raising the flag on
Iwo Jima) and the
Gandhi statue in 'march to
Dandi' stride, which has been duplicated on the lawns of the
Parliament House, were erected on the beach. Both the statues were sculpted by
Debi Roy Chowdhury, an artist who at the age of 30 became the first Indian
Principal of the
Madras School of
Arts and Crafts. In
1968, a number of statues of icons of
Tamil literature was erected to mark the first
World Tamil Conference, including
Avvaiyar,
Tiruvalluvar,
Kambar,
Subramania Bharathiyar,
Bharathidasan and the
Europeans Bishop Caldwell,
G.U. Pope and Fr. Beschi (Veeramunivar). Anna
Samadhi (memorial) was built in
1970 and the
MGR Samadhi in
1988, shortening the stretch at its northern end. More recent additions include the statues of
Kamaraj and
Shivaji Ganesan.
- published: 21 Oct 2015
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