Behind the percentages in this Tangled up in Green project update are a few teams pushing the work forward across the Devanahalli site every day. Three people leading delivery shared the latest Tangled up in Green construction updates, and between them they cover the whole picture — the site-wide progress, the heavy concrete utility structures, and the electrical, water and power services that make a plot liveable.
Updates from the teams on site
Site-wide progress — Varun Biltoria
Varun Biltoria, who heads overall operations and delivery, reports steady Tangled up in Green construction progress across both zones. In Zone 2, plot driveways are done on 99% of plots, service lines are 95% laid and in final testing, streetlight poles and plot levelling are each at 50%, and plot signages are up on 30%. Zone 1 is earlier in the cycle, with services at 40% and driveways at 15%. Around the site, the compound retaining wall is 65% built with east-side stone masonry at 40%, the security cabins’ masonry is complete with the north cabin’s plastering half done and its gate going in, and the central green’s stormwater chambers are 20% laid.

The underground water tank in Zone 2, with its walls concreted right up to roof-slab level.
The concrete utility structures — Gaurav Kamat
Gaurav Kamat, who heads the Craft Concrete Works team and leads the concrete works for the utility structures, reports several completions on the parts of the project that are hardest to rush. In Zone 1, the sewage treatment plant’s retaining walls and roof slab are done. In Zone 2, the secondary entrance on the west has had its roof waterproofing completed, the underground water tank is built up to roof-slab level, and roof slabs are cast for two of the three electrical panel rooms — a sequence that has to be right the first time, since these structures sit under everything else.

Cobblestone and flagstone finishing underway along a Zone 2 street, with the paved walkway and planted trees taking shape.
Electrical, water and power services — Abhisake Roy
Abhisake Roy, who leads the utility infrastructure works including electrical, water and power connectivity, reports that the finishing layer is now moving quickly. Cobblestone and flagstone are laid across nearly 70% of the area, and Zone 2 irrigation lines are 60% complete. Overall, close to 95% of Zone 2’s finishing works are on track for completion by 30 September 2026, which is the milestone his teams are building towards.
What each team is targeting next
| Team focus | Target for July–September 2026 |
| Site works — Zone 1 | Driveways to 50%, services to 75% |
| Site works — Zone 2 finishing | Streetlights and signages to 100% |
| Compound wall | Retaining wall to 80%, west stone masonry to 75% |
| Concrete utilities — STP | Structural civil works to 100%, with waterproofing |
| Concrete utilities — water tanks | Underground tank roof slab to 100%; overhead tank first slab to 40% |
| Concrete utilities — panel rooms | Last panel-room roof slab completed |
| Central green services | To 60% |
From serviced plot to finished villa
The Tangled up in Green latest news from these teams all points to one outcome: a fully serviced plot — roads, services, water and entry structures — ready for an owner to build on. Once that handover happens, owners can design and build a custom villa within Total Environment’s own ecosystem, using its eDesign platform and end-to-end construction and interior services. That keeps the land decision and the build decision separate, while staying with a single, design-led developer the whole way through rather than stitching together a string of contractors. For most buyers that is the practical appeal here — the same team laying these roads, casting these tanks and wiring these plots can carry straight on into the villa itself through eDesign, so the standard you can see on site today is the standard you would be building to later. It is also why the people leading the work are worth naming rather than leaving as an anonymous crew: on a plotted project, the developer’s own delivery teams are a large part of what you are trusting when you buy in. Few plotted communities can offer that kind of continuity, from the first service line in the ground to a finished, custom home, under a single roof.

