Offices gear up for a green makeover
New Delhi: Corporates are increasingly opting for green office interiors and materials that can be reused or made from recycled inputs as they sharpen their focus on carbon neutrality goals.
With office leasing in India crossing 75 million sq ft across six major cities in 2025 - reflecting a 19% CAGR since 2020 - office fit-outs are emerging as one of the biggest, yet often overlooked, contributors to material waste and carbon emissions in commercial real estate.

According to Savills India research, lower carbon emissions not only strengthen brand credibility and signal sustainability leadership, but interior fit-outs with lower embodied carbon are also expected to command higher rental premiums.
"When embedded into project planning from the outset, circular interiors can significantly reduce lifecycle costs, programme risk and material waste," said Sumit Rakshit, managing director - project management services at Savills India. "With stronger policy alignment, industry capability and long-term capital commitment, what are currently isolated pilot projects can evolve into scalable delivery models for the next generation of sustainable, future-ready workplaces."
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Circular fit-out approaches offer a solution by promoting reuse, reducing lifecycle costs and emissions, and enabling more adaptable workspaces. For a fast-evolving market such as India, embedding circularity is not only environmentally critical but also a strategic lever for long-term value creation and resilience.
"As India's office landscape continues to evolve, the way interiors are designed and delivered requires a fundamental rethink," said Arvind Nandan, managing director - research and consulting, Savills India. "While circular fit-outs remain at an early stage of adoption, they offer a credible pathway to reduce environmental impact while strengthening long-term asset resilience. Organisations that recognise this shift early will be better positioned to respond to rising ESG expectations and shape a future-ready, value-driven standard for workplace development."
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Savills said circular fit-out strategies could reduce embodied carbon emissions by 25-55%, while helping companies lower long-term waste, improve asset efficiency and align with rising ESG expectations.
"Over the next 5-7 years, circular and low-embodied-carbon fit-outs are likely to become standard in Grade-A and flexible offices," said Shruti Singh, co-founder and director - operations at Carbon Guardians. "Early moving landlords may gain differentiation, premium rents and reduced downtime, lowering life cycle risks. Broad adoption, however, will hinge on ecosystem maturity, with the fastest progress in top-tier cities and best-in-class developments before broader market diffusion."
India's commercial real estate sector is expanding rapidly, driven by shorter leases, high tenant turnover and frequent office refurbishments. While this reflects market dynamism, it is also generating substantial material waste and embodied carbon.
With office leasing in India crossing 75 million sq ft across six major cities in 2025 - reflecting a 19% CAGR since 2020 - office fit-outs are emerging as one of the biggest, yet often overlooked, contributors to material waste and carbon emissions in commercial real estate.
According to Savills India research, lower carbon emissions not only strengthen brand credibility and signal sustainability leadership, but interior fit-outs with lower embodied carbon are also expected to command higher rental premiums.
"When embedded into project planning from the outset, circular interiors can significantly reduce lifecycle costs, programme risk and material waste," said Sumit Rakshit, managing director - project management services at Savills India. "With stronger policy alignment, industry capability and long-term capital commitment, what are currently isolated pilot projects can evolve into scalable delivery models for the next generation of sustainable, future-ready workplaces."
Also read | Centre seeks states' bids for 50 industrial parks in 4 months, eyes rollout in 3 years
Circular fit-out approaches offer a solution by promoting reuse, reducing lifecycle costs and emissions, and enabling more adaptable workspaces. For a fast-evolving market such as India, embedding circularity is not only environmentally critical but also a strategic lever for long-term value creation and resilience.
"As India's office landscape continues to evolve, the way interiors are designed and delivered requires a fundamental rethink," said Arvind Nandan, managing director - research and consulting, Savills India. "While circular fit-outs remain at an early stage of adoption, they offer a credible pathway to reduce environmental impact while strengthening long-term asset resilience. Organisations that recognise this shift early will be better positioned to respond to rising ESG expectations and shape a future-ready, value-driven standard for workplace development."
Also read | HDFC Bank backs Hyderabad luxury housing project with Rs 300 crore
Savills said circular fit-out strategies could reduce embodied carbon emissions by 25-55%, while helping companies lower long-term waste, improve asset efficiency and align with rising ESG expectations.
"Over the next 5-7 years, circular and low-embodied-carbon fit-outs are likely to become standard in Grade-A and flexible offices," said Shruti Singh, co-founder and director - operations at Carbon Guardians. "Early moving landlords may gain differentiation, premium rents and reduced downtime, lowering life cycle risks. Broad adoption, however, will hinge on ecosystem maturity, with the fastest progress in top-tier cities and best-in-class developments before broader market diffusion."
India's commercial real estate sector is expanding rapidly, driven by shorter leases, high tenant turnover and frequent office refurbishments. While this reflects market dynamism, it is also generating substantial material waste and embodied carbon.
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