ITANAGAR/DIBRUGARH: Coffee steams and tea steeps where convoys once rolled. On a 1962 war relic that carried soldiers into uncertainty on India’s far edge in the Northeast, visitors now pause and look out. A bridge between past and present.
Perched over Nyamjang Chu river in remote Zemithang village, a decommissioned Bailey bridge has been upcycled into Border Brew Cafe — a striking blend of military history and grassroots enterprise barely 20km from the Chinese border in Tawang district of Arunachal Pradesh.
History runs deeper here. Zemithang marked India entry point for the 14th Dalai Lama in 1959 as he fled Tibet, a prelude to tensions that spiralled into war three years later.
Built by Army’s Gajraj Corps in 31 days under Operation Sadbhavna, the cafe doubles as a compact museum chronicling the Sino-Indian war and early battles that raged across Tawang sector.
Zemithang sits 100+ km north of Tawang town, a 5-hour drive along steep, winding roads via Lumla. A rougher, weather-prone route runs past Sangetsar lake. This tranquil valley 7,000+ feet above sea level once saw a different kind of traffic.
This is where Chinese forces breached the border and marched into the region in 1962.
The Bailey bridge served for decades as a lifeline for troop movement before a new span at Babtangkang took over, turning the old steel into redundancy — until the Army flipped the script.
A glassy vistadome crowns the structure, opening wide views of jagged Himalayan ridges and the river’s rush below. Inside, a “Wall of Valour” lines up portraits and names of soldiers from 1962, images frozen in bunkers and open ground. Two mannequins draw a stark contrast — khaki cottons and fibre jerseys of another era against modern thermal gear and quick-dry fabric — charting how the Army has evolved since that longshot defence in high altitude.
Women from the resident Monpa tribe run the cafe, serving coffee, tea, sandwiches, momo, and the regional specialty — butter tea called suja. The Rs 80 lakh cafe aims to seed income in a frontier economy while nudging tourists beyond Tawang’s usual circuit. “Idea to turn an old bridge into a museum and cafe is brilliant. It opens opportunity for locals and strengthens border tourism,” Lumla MLA Tsering Lhamu said.
Army officers described the bridge-to-bistro project as a first-of-its-kind in the Northeast — heritage infrastructure repurposed for modern use, with community at the centre. Eastern Command GOC-in-C Lt Gen RC Tiwari hailed troops’ effort, calling it a living example of Op Sadbhavna’s push for goodwill and socio-economic lift in border belts.
Where boots once thundered, teacups now clink. A sip of history — served hot above a Himalayan river.