In 1994, the government opened the first dry container port in Jodhpur and that, says Bhandari, “changed it all”. It became easier to send shipments to customers, prompting buying agents, who would earlier not venture outside Mumbai and Delhi for Indian furniture, to travel to Jodhpur to see what was available. The Bhandaris set up their first factory that year, investing ₹30 lakh from bank loans and savings. Now, they have three factories, five warehouses and 14 showrooms across Jodhpur. Export business in the city has exploded — from ₹2 crore at the end of the 1980s (of which the Bhandaris accounted for ₹12 lakh), furniture and handicraft exports from here brought in over ₹1,500 crore in FY13. It is this potential that prompted 32-year-old Mrigesh to join the family business in 2002. “I studied in the UK and could have stayed back there. But this business has a bright future,” he explains his decision. “Given the way the focus on quality has sharpened, in the next five years, Jodhpur will be a huge furniture hub globally.” In keeping with that prediction, in the past five years, the Bhandaris, too, have shifted focus from handicrafts to handmade furniture.