Every day, nearly 500 families in India receive news that will change their lives forever: a loved one lost to a road accident. In 2024 alone, approximately 180,000 people died on Indian roads, according to Union Minister Nitin Gadkari. Among them were 10,000 school children. Two-thirds of these victims were young people between 18 and 34 years old, India’s future workforce, entrepreneurs, and innovators, gone in an instant.
Meanwhile, India is witnessing one of the most significant urbanization events in human history. Over the next 25 years, approximately 300 million people will move to urban areas, equivalent to the entire population of the United States relocating to cities. By 2050, India’s urban population is expected to nearly double to 814 million. This is not just a statistic; it is 300 million individual stories of families seeking better opportunities, better healthcare, better education for their children.
But here is the challenge: 65% of India’s nearly 8,000 urban settlements function without a master plan, according to NITI Aayog. Cities are expanding without blueprints, roads are being built without foresight, and infrastructure is struggling to catch up with the relentless pace of growth. The result? Congestion that costs the economy billions, floods that paralyze entire cities during monsoons, and roads that claim lives instead of connecting communities.
A Digital Revolution in How India Builds
But a quiet revolution is underway. Across India, cities are no longer being designed solely in the physical world. They are first being built, tested, and optimized in the digital realm. At the heart of this transformation lies the creation of a critical national digital infrastructure—3D Digital Twins, high-precision 2D maps, High-Definition maps, and panoramic street imagery. This convergence of high-accuracy mapping, artificial intelligence, and real-world sensing is enabling governments, cities, and industries to see, simulate, and act with unprecedented precision.
“India’s infrastructure challenges are unique in scale and complexity. Solving them requires more than static maps or disconnected datasets. What’s needed is a highly accurate digital 3D representation of the physical world, one that cities and industries can rely on for real decision making.”
From Static Maps to Living Digital Cities
Imagine being able to test how a new metro line would affect traffic patterns before laying a single track. Or simulating how monsoon waters would flow through a neighbourhood before approving construction. 3D Digital Twin is already doing this—high fidelity virtual replicas of cities that go far beyond visualization.
Metropolitan regions like Mumbai are leveraging the 3D city models for infrastructure planning, asset visualization, transport corridor design, and command and control integration. Cities including Pune, Surat, Varanasi, and Ayodhya are building similar digital foundations. These digital twins accurately represent roads, buildings, utilities, assets, elevation, and urban context at an engineering level, continuously updated, AI driven, and designed to integrate directly into infrastructure workflows.
“Digital twins are becoming the backbone of smart infrastructure. “They allow city authorities to simulate outcomes before committing resources on the ground, reducing risk, improving efficiency, and accelerating execution.”
Making Roads Safer: The HD Map Revolution
Remember the 180,000 lives lost on Indian roads last year? Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) require far more than what traditional maps can offer. They depend on High-Definition (HD) maps with lane-level accuracy—capturing road geometry, gradients, signage, and semantic details with centimetre-level precision.
A landmark milestone has now been achieved in this domain, with India generating significant coverage of High-Definition road data purpose-built for ADAS and future-ready automotive platforms. “This is not just about scale. It is about building India grade HD data that works in real driving conditions. Strong adoption is being seen from automotive OEMs, who increasingly recognize that HD maps are foundational to vehicle safety, automation, and intelligent driving behaviour.
As Indian OEMs accelerate investments in ADAS and next generation mobility, HD geospatial data is emerging as a critical layer, bridging the gap between vehicle intelligence and the physical road network.
Building India’s Digital Ground Truth
As 300 million Indians prepare to make cities their home over the coming decades, the stakes could not be higher. India has a once in a generation opportunity to get it right, to build cities that are planned rather than reactive, roads that save lives rather than take them, and infrastructure that can withstand the pressures of rapid growth.
Accuracy, scale, and data sovereignty will define the next phase of innovation. “Geospatial data is no longer a support function. It is core national digital infrastructure. Those who control accurate digital ground truth will shape how India builds, moves, and grows over the next decade.”
In this new paradigm, maps are no longer just references. They are becoming the operating system for India’s smart infrastructure, and quite possibly, the difference between cities that thrive and cities that merely survive.



