LML Realty has announced that its upcoming industrial park in the Jhirka Valley region of Jhajjar district is expected to catalyse investments exceeding Rs 1,000 crore, with more than 50 companies indicating participation. The proposed development signals rising investor confidence in planned industrial clusters near the National Capital Region (NCR), where demand for organised, infrastructure-ready land continues to grow.
The project, positioned as an integrated industrial ecosystem, is being developed with an infrastructure-first model. According to company officials, essential utilities, internal transport networks and compliance frameworks are being embedded during the initial stages of development, rather than added after occupancy. The approach is aimed at reducing operational bottlenecks and long-term costs for manufacturing and logistics enterprises. Among the firms that have committed to setting up units are A.D. Global Synergies Pvt Ltd, Hindustan Rasayan Pvt Ltd, Shri Cranes, VAAN Global Energy, ASA Infra Logistics Pvt Ltd, Aadhya Enterprises, N V Metal Industries, PCS Vullion Pvt Ltd and several others spanning chemicals, engineering, trading and logistics sectors. Together with additional enterprises in advanced discussions, the cumulative planned investment is projected to cross Rs 1,000 crore over the coming phases. The Jhajjar industrial hub is emerging at a time when Haryana is actively positioning itself as a manufacturing and warehousing alternative to more saturated NCR locations. Improved highway connectivity, policy incentives and proximity to Delhi’s consumption markets have made the district attractive for mid- to large-scale units seeking scalable plots within an organised framework.
Urban development analysts note that the shift towards cluster-based planning reflects lessons from earlier, fragmented industrial growth patterns. Unplanned estates often struggle with inadequate drainage, unreliable power supply and poor last-mile connectivity issues that increase environmental risk and business costs. In contrast, master-planned parks that integrate utilities, mobility corridors and compliance mechanisms from inception are seen as more resilient and easier to regulate. For cities and peri-urban districts like Jhajjar, structured industrial growth carries both opportunity and responsibility. Large-scale industrial parks can generate employment and diversify local economies, but they also require careful planning around water use, waste management and transport emissions. Experts suggest that embedding sustainable infrastructure including energy-efficient systems and responsible land use will be critical to ensuring that the Jhajjar industrial hub evolves as a long-term economic asset rather than a short-term real estate play. Company leadership has indicated that the project’s design focuses on scalability, predictable expansion and cost efficiency for occupiers. The emphasis, they suggest, is on creating an ecosystem where enterprises can begin operations quickly and expand without major structural adjustments.
As investment commitments formalise, the coming years will test whether Jhajjar can consolidate its position as a strategic industrial corridor within Haryana’s growth map. If executed with planning discipline and environmental safeguards, the development could reinforce the region’s role in India’s next phase of manufacturing-led urban expansion.
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LML Realty plans Jhajjar industrial expansion






