This update takes the questions people most often ask about Tangled up in Green right now and answers each one with the latest Tangled up in Green construction status from the Devanahalli site. Instead of a long narrative, it works through the project the way a prospective buyer actually thinks about it — one practical question at a time. Here is where things stand in June 2026.
How far along is Tangled up in Green overall?
Ask what is the construction status of Tangled up in Green, and the answer is that as of June 2026 the project is under construction, with work moving across both zones. Zone 2 already reads like a near-finished neighbourhood — its plot driveways are done on 99% of plots and service connections are 95% laid. Zone 1 is at an earlier stage, with services at 40% and driveways at 15%, which is by design, since the project builds one zone ahead of the other. Across the whole site, cobblestone and flagstone finishing has reached nearly 70%, so a lot of the surface you would eventually see is already in.

An overhead view of the full site in June 2026, with Zone 1 and Zone 2 marked and the road grid visible across both halves.
Which zone is further ahead, and why?
Is Tangled up in Green under construction or ready to move? Clearly still under construction, and within that, Zone 2 is the front-runner. Because the project is built zone by zone, Zone 2’s roads, services and finishing are well ahead of Zone 1’s, and the team is now closing out Zone 2 while ramping up Zone 1. The table below puts the two side by side on the items where progress has been reported, so the gap is easy to see at a glance.
| Item | Zone 1 | Zone 2 |
| Plot driveways (concrete) | 15% | 99% |
| Services / service lines | 40% | 95% (testing) |
| Streetlight poles | — | 50% |
| Plot levelling | — | 50% |
| Plot signages | — | 30% |
What’s already finished on site?
A few major pieces are fully built, and these are the ones that take the longest. The Zone 1 sewage treatment plant has its retaining walls and roof slab complete, the Zone 2 underground water tank is built up to roof-slab level, and both security cabins have their masonry done. Two of the three electrical panel rooms already have their roof slabs cast, and the west-side secondary entrance has had its roof waterproofing finished — so the utility and entry backbone is largely in place.

An aerial look at Zone 2 with plot levelling and road works underway across the cleared, gridded plots.
Where is it, and how connected is it?
Location matters as much as progress, so this Tangled up in Green construction update Devanahalli round-up also covers the setting: the project sits on Doddaballapura Main Road in Devanahalli, North Bangalore, right next to the Satellite Town Ring Road (STRR), with NH-648 close by. Kempegowda International Airport is about 14 km away and the upcoming Devanahalli metro station around 5 km away. The corridor is anchored by large employers such as the Foxconn electronics hub, the KIADB Aerospace SEZ and the Devanahalli Business Park, with international schools and multi-specialty hospitals within a short drive — which is a big part of why this stretch of North Bangalore is drawing so much attention.
What’s planned before the year is out?
Through the July to September 2026 quarter, Zone 2 streetlights and plot signages are targeted at 100%, the underground water tank roof slab at completion, Zone 1 driveways at 50% and services at 75%, and the compound retaining wall at 80%. Around 95% of Zone 2’s finishing works are on track to be completed by 30 September 2026, so the next few months should noticeably change how finished the site looks. If you are following the project from a distance, the cleanest things to watch are the Zone 2 streetlights and signages reaching 100% and Zone 1’s driveways stepping up to 50%, since those are the changes that will show up both on the ground and in any fresh set of site photos. Step back from the works themselves and the appeal of the location is simple to state: an airport, a coming metro line, a ring road and several large employers all sit within a tight radius, yet the community itself stays low-density and green rather than dense and urban. That mix of strong connectivity and a relaxed, planted setting is a big part of why this corridor of North Bangalore keeps drawing attention.