Generated by GPT-5-mini| Manyata Tech Park | |
|---|---|
| Name | Manyata Tech Park |
| Location | Bangalore, Karnataka, India |
| Developer | Manyata Group |
| Area | 110 acres |
| Established | 2005 |
| Type | Information technology park |
Manyata Tech Park is a large integrated office park and commercial campus in Bengaluru known for hosting multinational information technology and business process outsourcing firms. Founded in the mid-2000s, the campus developed amid rapid expansion of Electronic City, Bangalore, Whitefield, Bangalore, and the Outer Ring Road, Bangalore IT corridor, becoming a major node in Karnataka's software industry cluster. Many global corporations and domestic firms occupy the campus, which combines office towers, retail spaces, and ancillary services to serve employees and corporate clients.
The park's conception traces to early-2000s investments by the Manyata Group and regional real estate developers responding to demand from companies such as Wipro, Infosys, and Tata Consultancy Services. Land acquisition and master planning involved stakeholders from Bengaluru Development Authority and private entities linked to the rise of the Narayana Health and Manipal Hospitals networks nearby. Opening phases saw anchor tenants including IBM, Accenture, and Cognizant expanding in India. Through the 2010s, the campus adapted to governance frameworks influenced by decisions from the Karnataka Industrial Area Development Board and regulatory notifications from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (India). Corporate relocations in the 2020s reflected dynamics also affecting campuses in Hyderabad, India and Pune, India, as firms like Amazon (company), Google, and Microsoft altered space strategies.
Situated in north Bengaluru near the Nagawara Lake corridor, the campus sits adjacent to major arterial links like the Hebbal Flyover and the Bellary Road-Old Madras Road axis. The master plan organizes the site into multiple high-rise blocks, landscaped plazas, and structured parking, mirroring elements seen at Electronic City Phase II and Bagmane Tech Park. Public-facing amenities include food courts, retail outlets, and fitness centers comparable to facilities at International Tech Park, Bangalore and RMZ Ecoworld. The proximity to landmarks such as Manyata Embassy Business Park and Pinnacle Tower shapes commuter flows and local land use patterns.
The campus includes Grade-A office buildings, central utility plants, and backup power systems similar to those at SEZ campuses. Technical infrastructure emphasizes enterprise-ready setups: redundant data center connectivity, carrier hotels, and fiber links used by organizations like HCLTech and Tech Mahindra. Facilities management provides cafeteria chains akin to Taj Group and ITC Hotels contracting models, along with clinics affiliated with healthcare providers such as Apollo Hospitals and Fortis Healthcare. Conference centers and training rooms host events comparable to those at Bangalore International Exhibition Centre and Nimhans Convention Centre, while green spaces reflect urban design approaches seen at Cubbon Park rejuvenation projects.
Tenants represent a cross-section of multinational and Indian firms in sectors including software development, business process outsourcing, financial services, pharmaceuticals, and e‑commerce. Notable occupants have included subsidiaries or regional offices of Accenture, Cognizant, Capgemini, Dell Technologies, Mphasis, and Goldman Sachs. Startups and mid‑sized firms mirror ecosystems around Indian Institute of Science and Indian Institute of Management Bangalore alumni networks, while service providers include consultancies such as Deloitte, Ernst & Young, and KPMG supporting corporate clients. The tenant mix reflects industry trends also visible at Cyberpark and Technopark, Trivandrum.
The park contributes to employment across technical, managerial, and facility services roles, paralleling job generation seen in Bengaluru IT cluster studies. Employment figures have drawn workers from neighborhoods like Yeshwanthpur, Hebbal, and Jalahalli, and supported ancillary businesses in retail, hospitality, and real estate brokerage. Corporate taxes and lease revenues interact with municipal finances overseen by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike. The concentration of firms increased demand for residential developments such as projects by Prestige Group and Brigade Group, and influenced wage trends observed across Karnataka's IT sector.
Access is served by arterial highways and feeder roads connecting to the Kempegowda International Airport corridor and the Bangalore Metro network expansion plans that include corridors near Nagawara and Hebbal. Shuttle services operated by major tenants link the campus to transit hubs like Baiyappanahalli and Majestic (Krantivira Sangolli Rayanna railway station). Proximity to the Outer Ring Road, Bangalore and flyovers analogous to the Hebbal Flyover shapes commuting patterns; cycle lanes and last-mile mobility options mirror initiatives promoted by the Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation and urban mobility pilots supported by NITI Aayog.
Campus security combines private security contractors with coordination from local law enforcement such as the Karnataka State Police and municipal authorities from the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike. Governance structures include facility management companies and estate boards that manage lease compliance, fire safety systems adhering to standards influenced by the National Building Code of India, and environmental reporting aligned with policies of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (India). Corporate tenancy agreements reference dispute-resolution mechanisms used in commercial real estate markets across India.
Category:Buildings and structures in Bangalore Category:Information technology in India Category:Business parks