place

Kodibeesanahalli metro station

Namma Metro stationsProposed railway stations in IndiaUse Indian English from December 2023
Kodibeesanahalli metro station (Dec '23)
Kodibeesanahalli metro station (Dec '23)

Kodibeesanahalli is an upcoming elevated metro station on the North-South corridor of the Blue Line of Namma Metro in Bangalore, India. Around this metro station holds the IT Companies like Adobe, Nutanix Technologies Pvt. Ltd followed by Prestige Tech Park containing corporate and IT companies such as CoinSwitch, Amadeus Software Labs, Juniper Networks, Oracle Tech Hub and Byju's - The Learning App. This metro station is slated to become operational around June 2026.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kodibeesanahalli metro station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kodibeesanahalli metro station
Outer Ring Road, Bengaluru Kaadubeesanahalli (Mahadevapura Zone)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Kodibeesanahalli metro stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 12.94504 ° E 77.6981 °
placeShow on map

Address

Outer Ring Road (Srinagar - Kanyakumari Highway)

Outer Ring Road
560037 Bengaluru, Kaadubeesanahalli (Mahadevapura Zone)
Karnataka, India
mapOpen on Google Maps

Kodibeesanahalli metro station (Dec '23)
Kodibeesanahalli metro station (Dec '23)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Indian Space Research Organisation
Indian Space Research Organisation

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO; ) is the national space agency of India, headquartered in Bangalore. It operates under the Department of Space (DOS) which is directly overseen by the Prime Minister of India, while the Chairman of ISRO acts as the executive of DOS as well. ISRO is India's primary agency for performing tasks related to space-based applications, space exploration and the development of related technologies. It is one of six government space agencies in the world which possess full launch capabilities, deploy cryogenic engines, launch extraterrestrial missions and operate large fleets of artificial satellites.The Indian National Committee for Space Research (INCOSPAR) was established by Jawaharlal Nehru under the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) in 1962, on the urging of scientist Vikram Sarabhai, recognising the need in space research. INCOSPAR grew and became ISRO in 1969, within DAE. In 1972, the government of India set up a Space Commission and DOS, bringing ISRO under it. The establishment of ISRO thus institutionalised space research activities in India. It since then has been managed by DOS, which governs various other institutions in India in the domain of astronomy and space technology.ISRO built India's first satellite, Aryabhata, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1975. In 1980, ISRO launched satellite RS-1 onboard its own SLV-3, making India the seventh country to be capable of undertaking orbital launches. SLV-3 was followed by ASLV, which was subsequently succeeded by development of many medium-lift launch vehicles, rocket engines, satellite systems and networks enabling the agency to launch hundreds of domestic and foreign satellites and various deep space missions for space exploration. ISRO has the world's largest constellation of remote-sensing satellites and operates the GAGAN and NAVIC satellite navigation systems. It has sent two missions to the Moon and one to Mars. Goals in near future include expanding satellites fleet, landing a rover on Moon, sending humans into space, development of a semi-cryogenic engine, sending more unmanned missions to the Moon, Mars, Venus and Sun and deployment of more space telescopes in orbit to observe cosmic phenomena and outerspace beyond the Solar System. Long-term plans include development of reusable launchers, heavy and super heavy launch vehicles, deploying a space station, sending exploration missions to external planets like Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune and asteroids and manned missions to moons and planets. ISRO's programs have played a significant role in the socio-economic development of India and have supported both civilian and military domains in various aspects including disaster management, telemedicine and navigation and reconnaissance missions. ISRO's spin off technologies also have founded many crucial innovations for India's engineering and medical industries.

Outer Ring Road, Bangalore
Outer Ring Road, Bangalore

The Outer Ring Road (ORR), officially renamed as Dr. Puneeth Rajkumar Ring Road, is a ring road that runs around most of the perimeter of the city of Bangalore, Karnataka, India. This 60-kilometre-long (37 mi) road was developed by the Bangalore Development Authority and different sections were opened progressively between 1996 and 2002. IT firms on the Outer Ring Road generate revenue of US$ 22 billion every year, accounting for 32% of Bengaluru’s total IT revenue.The Outer Ring Road connects all major highways around the city – Tumakuru Road (NH 48), Airport Road (NH 44), Old Madras Road (NH 75), Hosur Road (NH 44), Bannerghatta Road (SH 87), Kanakapura Road (NH 948), Mysuru Road (NH 275) and Magadi Road (SH 85). It passes through major neighborhoods and suburbs such as Hebbala, Banaswadi, Krishnarajapuram, Mahadevapuram, Marathahalli, HSR Layout, Madiwala, BTM Layout, JP Nagar, Banashankari, Kengeri, Bangalore University, Nagarbhavi, Nandini Layout, Kengeri Satellite Town and Gokula. Initially conceived to keep the truck traffic out of downtown Bangalore, the city has outgrown the Outer Ring Road. Nandi Infrastructure Corporation Limited has almost completed another partial ring road around Bangalore as a part of the Bangalore–Mysore Infrastructure Corridor (BMIC) project. The BDA and BMRDA have planned three more ring roads beyond the existing ring road. The first of these, the Peripheral Ring Road (PRR) will run a few kilometres beyond the BMIC-PRR. The second and third of these will be known as the Intermediate Ring Road (IRR) and the Satellite Towns Ring Road (STRR) respectively.