Some parts of Tangled up in Green are no longer drawings or promises — they are built, poured and standing on the ground. This Total Environment Tangled up in Green construction update sets aside the targets and percentages-to-come and focuses on what is already complete at the Devanahalli plotted community: the progress you can see, walk past and touch on a site visit. It is the kind of delivery you would expect from Total Environment, a developer with a long habit of finishing what it designs.
Structures that are fully built
The core of Tangled up in Green infrastructure development is in good shape, and these civil structures are the pieces that take the longest and matter most. In Zone 1, the sewage treatment plant has its retaining walls and roof slab complete. In Zone 2, the underground water tank is built right up to roof-slab level. Both the north and west security cabins have their masonry fully 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. Together these form the utility and entry backbone the rest of the community will plug into.

The underground water tank in Zone 2, with its walls concreted right up to roof-slab level.
Roads, services and ground works that are done
On the surface, the Tangled up in Green latest construction updates show Zone 2 as the most complete part of the site, and it already reads like a finished street rather than a construction field. Its plot driveways are done on 99% of plots, the service connections that run to each plot are 95% laid, and half the plots are levelled. Across the project, cobblestone and flagstone work has reached nearly 70%, giving the roads their hand-laid texture instead of a bare concrete finish. The list below sums up the works that are complete or all but complete.
- Zone 2 plot driveways — concrete complete on 99%
- Zone 2 service line connections — 95% done, in final testing
- Cobblestone and flagstone finishing — nearly 70% laid
- Plot levelling — done on 50% of Zone 2 plots
- Security cabins (north and west) — masonry fully complete

The west security cabin, masonry complete, with its roof slab cast and the covered entry taking shape.
A developer that builds what it draws
All of this carries the stamp of Total Environment, founded in 1996 by architects Kamal Sagar and Shibanee Sagar and known for a design-led, nature-first way of building. Over nearly three decades the company has delivered more than 4 million square feet of customised homes for over 1,200 customers, and it is vertically integrated right down to its own materials and furniture, which is part of why its finishing tends to hold up. Its eDesign platform lets owners design and customise their own homes before building — so at this project, buyers acquire a serviced plot now and can build a bespoke villa later within the same trusted ecosystem, rather than chasing multiple contractors.
What’s lined up to finish next
For the Tangled up in Green latest news, the focus through the July to September 2026 quarter shifts to closing out Zone 2. Streetlight poles and plot signages are targeted at 100%, the underground water tank roof slab at completion, and the sewage treatment plant’s structural civil work at 100% with waterproofing alongside. The compound retaining wall is set to reach 80%, and roughly 95% of Zone 2’s finishing works are on track to be done by the end of September 2026. Put together, this is a development status you can verify with your own eyes — standing structures, finished streets and services already in the ground, rather than progress that lives only on a brochure. It is the kind of progress that is easy to underrate, because finished underground structures and levelled streets photograph far less dramatically than a rising tower — yet they are the parts that decide whether a community comes together smoothly or stalls. Getting the water tank, the treatment plant and the cabin shells out of the way early means the heavy, slow civil work is largely behind the project, and most of what is left is finishing and connections. For anyone weighing up the development, that is the reassuring read: a status you can walk through and verify in person, not a set of claims on a page.