FROM a distance, it’s like the view of an inky, diamond-studded sheet of sky. But it’s not really the sky you are looking at as you cross Delhi’s border into Gurgaon on a chilly winter evening. This is where Manhattan skylines loom over mega-malls-in-the making, with little points of light winking at the road from the windows of high-rises all around. This is where American beauty meets the cow belt. Where Jacaranda Street pulls up at rows of neat bungalows. Where marble-tiled condominiums and villas dot complexes with swimming pools, gyms, basketball, tennis, squash and badminton courts, landscaped lawns and basement parking. And where Beverly Park, Ridgewood Estate, Heritage City and Regency Park are addresses in Om Prakash Chautala land. Enter the world of Indian suburbia. Tune in to the emerging suburban culture of Delhi where a beyond-the-borders existence is no longer infra dig. The lessons are floating in from overseas, and from Navi Mumbai being a posh addition to existing ’burbs-that-no-one-really-considers-the-’burbs, Khar, Andheri, Bandra. A newly evolving suburban animal — the subanimal — inhabits this neon-lit space. Their often reluctant links with the parent city — Delhi or Mumbai — are fragile. For many of them, Delhi is to Gurgaon, what Purani Dilli is to New Delhi: a place you visit if you must. Tell Gunjan Sinha, a 20-something Gurgaon resident that a PVR multiplex will soon be coming up in her neighbourhood, and she exults: ‘‘Once our own multiplex opens, it’s goodbye Delhi.’’ In the search for the Gurgaon subanimal, our car pulls up at the carefully guarded entrance of Garden Estate. The title is not entirely wasted on this stylish suburban housing colony where Gayatri Gupta lives. Gayatri’s home is as understated as she is. There’s nothing loud here, but everything screams class — muted colours, low lighting, and Gayatri in her dark trousers. The attractive young Sanawarian and Lady Shriram College, Delhi, graduate, sinks into a plush sofa as she says quietly: ‘‘It’s a comfortable life.’’ Comfortable? Hmm, bit of an understatement. Sure, the Guptas are no cousins of the Raichands who inhabited the palace in Karan Johar’s fantasy flick K3G (address: somewhere in Delhi). Theirs is a location you can place — DLF City Phase I, Gurgaon — in the Capital’s suburbs. And yes, it’s a believable, self-contained upper-middle-class existence where commuting is done by car and not on chopper alone. The extras are laid on, as are the essentials. Security is a pre-requisite, of course, as are power back-ups and clubhousesSays Dr Aparna Salunke who runs a clinic in Vashi: ‘‘The children here go to Ryan International, Apeejay or Delhi Special School, which is readying its International School building right next door.’’ Ryan is reportedly trying to get recognition as a school offering the British O-levels. From these ’burbs will be born future globe-trotters, citizens-in-transit, as comfortable in New York as in Navi Mumbai. Like much of Gurgaon, the Navi Mumbai subanimal, too, echoes Salunke as she says: ‘‘When my son grows up, he will do exactly what he wants.’’ Schools, hospitals . ‘‘we’ve got everything here,’’ says Teesha Kochhar, an insurance employee who stays in a bungalow with a seven-member joint family in Gurgaon. The subanimal makes a statement by making no statement at all. Teesha does it with a pale pink shawl casually thrown around her shoulders, her slim figure hugged by a pair of fitted blue jeans. She and her husband Suneet work close by. With Gurgaon’s virtual lack of public transport, they still remember the difficult months they spent commuting to ‘‘town’’ with just one car between them. Today the family owns four cars. Work is not always a motive for the move, there’s also escape from the inner-city chaos. And now, the subanimal is determined to tame Chautala’s Haryana as if it were the American Wild West. So, as independent bungalows — where everything is not necessarily ‘‘taken care of’’ — began facing power shortages, residents welfare associations became active. They went a step further. Former Foreign Secretary J N Dixit spearheads SURGE (Society for Urban Regeneration of Gurgaon and Its Environs). The Punjab and Haryana High Court has admitted two PILs filed by SURGE, one questioning the use of residential land for commercial purposes; the second demanding to know what the government did with the several hundred crores collected by builders from house-owners and deposited with the government to develop infrastructure for these colonies.