Ask any project manager who’s run a large construction site in India, and they’ll usually have a version of the same story. The site is spread across multiple hectares. There are parallel work packages happening at different elevations, different zones, sometimes different contractors. Keeping an accurate picture of what’s actually happening on the ground at any given point is, to put it politely, a logistical headache.

The old way of dealing with that was more people. More site supervisors. More manual reporting. More coordination calls where half the meeting is spent reconciling conflicting updates from different parts of the site.

That approach doesn’t scale. And as construction projects in India grow larger and more complex, whether it’s infrastructure, oil and gas, mining, or industrial facilities, the gap between what ground-level monitoring can capture and what project teams actually need to know keeps getting wider.

Drone surveying has moved into that gap. Not as a novelty, not as something reserved for large international EPC firms, but as a practical tool that’s reshaping how sites are understood, documented, and managed.

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