| North India’s Tech Park Dilemma: Can it ever Play Catch-up? If you are a software company looking to set shop in north India, dreaming of
readily available infrastructure in an integrated tech park; to move in and
start operations in a jiffy…keep dreaming.
...For your dream will remain just that, at least for the time being. There
are no integrated tech parks in any part of north India—like Tidel Park (Chennai)
or ITPL (Bangalore) yet—not even in the NCR region. But as northern states
wake up to the IT wave that has swept across states down southern and western
India, there are a lot of initiatives underway promoting the setting up of
integrated tech parks. The Chandigarh administration is close to signing up an
agreement with Larson & Toubro for setting up the region’s first
integrated tech park—to come up by end of this year.
Rakesh Nangia, executive director of Punjab Information & Communication
Technology Corporation, says—"The government of Punjab will actively
facilitate the construction of integrated tech parks by private sector
companies." PICTC is a state-run corporation set up for promoting
IT-related investments in Punjab.
Nangia also speaks of the government’s plans to set up an integrated IT
township spread over 5,000 acres of land, with space for residential areas,
independent plots for large companies to set up their campuses, and finally,
integrated tech parks constructed in association with the private sector.
Integrated tech parks apart, many IT companies do find a few good reasons to set
up operations here. Infosys chose Mohali to set up its first development center
in the north, and Quark Media’s development center, again in Mohali, is the
company’s only point of presence in India. Next Page : TIDEL PARK, CHENNAI: Bursting at the Seams Page(s) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
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