The iconic Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai has just got itself trademarked.
This makes the 114-year-old building the first in the country to get such a registration.
The hotel, which has been a defining structure of Mumbai's skyline, has joined the elite and small club of trademarked properties in the world which includes the Empire State Building in New York, the Eiffel Tower in Paris and Sydney Opera House.
Usually, logos, brand names, combination of colours, numerals and even sounds are trademarked but the registration of an architectural design has never been attempted since the Trademark Act came into force in 1999.
The Taj Mahal Palace which was built in 1903 even before the Gateway of India, acted as a triangulation point for the Indian Navy to show way towards the harbour.
During World War I, the property, constructed by former IHCL chairman Cyrus Mistry's family firm Shapoorji Pallonji & Co, was converted into a hospital.
The unique red-tiled Florentine gothic dome which crowns the Indo-Saracenic arches and architraves of the hotel became a symbol of the 2008-terror attacks in Mumbai after images of it being engulfed in smoke broke in the media.
With IHCL trademarking the building, nobody can now use Taj Mahal Palace's images for commercial purposes without paying the company a licensing fee.
Currently a couple of stores sell merchandise like photo frames and cufflinks with the hotel's pictures on them.
In the recent past, the trademarked Empire State Building dragged a New York resident to court for using its image as a beer logo.
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