Shree Mumbadevi Mandir: live video as a digital connection to a place
This example shows that a video layer can make sense even when the goal is not marketing or booking, but staying connected to a place over time.
The official Shree Mumbadevi Mandir website uses Live Darshan, the daily temple schedule, and a video element on the homepage. The live view is part of the institution's communication with worshippers and online visitors.
Video stream preview
Live Darshan preview
This public preview is taken from the live section of the temple's official website.
What this example solves
- Some people cannot be physically present at the place.
- The institution wants to enable connection to the place from a distance.
- The website should offer more than location, opening hours, and basic information.
How RTSP.RUN is used
- A camera stream is turned into normal browser-ready playback.
- The live view is integrated into the website next to schedule and other key information.
- The website becomes an ongoing digital channel instead of only an information page.
Main benefits
Remote access to an important place
Live Darshan lets people stay in contact with the place even when they cannot be there in person.
More reasons to return to the website
A site with live content attracts repeat visits more naturally than a basic informational page.
Stronger connection with the community
Video acts as a bridge between the place and people watching remotely.
What to take from this for your own rollout
Live video also makes sense outside commercial scenarios when it helps maintain an ongoing connection to a place.
This pattern fits institutions, communities, and public places with recurring attention or visits.
The video layer becomes stronger when it sits alongside practical information and a schedule.
What this example proves
Shree Mumbadevi Mandir shows that a video layer can be an important digital connection to a place even outside commercial use cases.
For community or public institutions, live video can be a digital bridge to people who cannot be on site.