Introduction
Kerala’s industrial park and Special Economic Zone ecosystem is one of the most active in South India and one of the least well-served by construction content. Thousands of businesses every year evaluate plots in Cochin SEZ, Kinfra industrial parks, or the emerging logistics zones around Vizhinjam Port. Most of them spend months negotiating the land and lease terms, then arrive at the construction stage with limited guidance on what the building requirements are, what they will cost, and how long they will take.
This guide is written for both audiences: the industrial park developer or zone authority planning infrastructure and sheds for tenant occupation, and the company or investor setting up a new manufacturing, processing, or logistics unit within one of Kerala’s industrial estates. The structural system, the specification, and the construction approach are different between these two use cases and the mistakes each makes are different too.
Lee Builders has been building industrial facilities across Kerala’s industrial corridors since 1995 including projects within Kinfra parks, the Cochin industrial belt, and the Ernakulam logistics cluster. The guidance in this article reflects three decades of construction experience in these specific environments.
Table of Contents
Kerala's Industrial Park and SEZ Landscape
Understanding the specific parks and zones active in Kerala helps both developers and tenants know where activity is concentrated, what infrastructure standards apply, and what construction demand is being generated.
COCHIN SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE (CSEZ)
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KINFRA INDUSTRIAL PARKS
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VIZHINJAM INTERNATIONAL SEAPORT LOGISTICS ZONE
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SMART CITY KOCHI
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KINFRA INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL ZONES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRIAL ESTATES
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What Industrial Park Developers Need to Know
For the development authority or private developer building infrastructure within an industrial park standard sheds, common facility buildings, utilities infrastructure, and tenant-customised units the structural and specification decisions made at the park planning stage determine the quality of occupier that the park can attract and retain.
Standard Shed Specifications: What Grade A Industrial Tenants Require
The gap between what a Grade C industrial shed delivers and what an anchor industrial tenant requires is substantial and that gap is exactly where developers lose deals to competing parks. Here is what leading manufacturing, logistics, and processing tenants in Kerala’s industrial parks are specifying:
| Specification factor | Minimum for Grade A occupier | Typical Grade C provision |
| Eave height (internal clear) | 9m to 15m for logistics; 6m to 9m for manufacturing | 4m to 5m – limits high-bay racking and equipment |
| Clear span (column-free) | 30m to 60m for logistics; 20m to 30m for manufacturing | 12m to 18m – columns disrupt process and racking layouts |
| Floor loading (UDL) | 30 to 50 kN/m2 with defined point load positions | 15 to 20 kN/m2 – insufficient for heavy equipment |
| Overhead crane provision | Designed and built in from structure | Typically absent – costly retrofit |
| Dock-level loading bays | Yes — dock levellers, dock seals, canopy | Typically absent or at grade level only |
| Cladding specification | Galvalume or JSW Colouron, SMP or PVDF | GI – short life in Kerala’s coastal/humid conditions |
| Rainwater harvesting | Roof-fed collection integrated into design | Rarely provided |
| IS code compliance | IS 800 / IS 875 structural certification | Variable – often without formal structural drawings |
The business case for Grade A specification: A KINFRA or private industrial park developer who builds to Grade A specification can command Rs. 18 to 28 per sq. ft. per month in rent versus Rs. 8 to 14 per sq. ft. for Grade C provision in the same location. The construction cost premium for a Grade A PEB shed over a basic shed is typically 40 to 60 percent, but the rental yield premium is 80 to 120 percent. The capital case for building to Grade A standard is overwhelmingly positive. |
Infrastructure Buildings: Utilities, Common Facilities, and Amenities
Beyond the individual sheds, industrial park developers are responsible for infrastructure buildings that serve the entire park and these have their own structural requirements:
- Common Effluent Treatment Plant (CETP) structures: civil and structural steel buildings housing treatment equipment; must comply with pollution control board requirements; typically a hybrid structure with RCC basin and steel superstructure
- Substation and electrical infrastructure buildings: transformer rooms, switchgear rooms, and DG set enclosures structural steel buildings with specific cable entry provisions and ventilation requirements
- Common facility centre (CFC): canteen, training rooms, banking facility, and shared meeting spaces multistorey steel frame is appropriate for CFC buildings of 2 to 4 floors; faster construction than RCC means the CFC can be ready before the first tenants occupy
- Security cabin and gatehouse: small structures but visible and brand-representative; quality construction signals to prospective tenants the development standard of the park
- Internal road infrastructure: not a structural steel application but relevant to site development costs and often value-engineered at the expense of road quality; poor internal roads are the most common complaint from industrial park tenants across Kerala
What Tenant-Companies Need to Know
For the company setting up a new manufacturing, processing, or logistics unit within an industrial park, whether building their own unit or fitting out a developer-built shell, the construction process has specific requirements that differ from a standalone greenfield development.
ZONE AUTHORITY APPROVALS – UNDERSTAND THE PROCESS BEFORE YOU DESIGN
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LEASE BOUNDARY AND UTILITY CONNECTIONS – VERIFY BEFORE FOUNDATION DESIGN
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STRUCTURAL REQUIREMENTS DRIVEN BY YOUR PROCESS – SPECIFY CORRECTLY FROM THE START
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CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMME – ALIGN WITH YOUR OPERATIONS TIMELINE
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Structural Requirements Specific to Industrial Park Buildings
Industrial park buildings have structural requirements that differ from general commercial construction driven by process loads, fire zone classifications, drainage requirements, and the co-location of multiple tenants with different operational needs.
1. Floor Loading and Slab Specification
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2. Clear Height and Eave Height
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3. Fire Zone and Compartmentation
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4. Rainwater Drainage and Industrial Effluent Separation • Kerala’s high annual rainfall (2,800 to 4,000mm) requires large-capacity roof drainage systems gutters, downpipes, and external drainage channels must be sized for peak rainfall intensity, not average • Industrial parks require strict separation of rainwater runoff from process effluent the drainage design must route roof water directly to stormwater drains and process floor drainage to the CETP connection • Ground floor drainage within the industrial building must be designed for the specific effluent characteristics of the process food processing, chemical, and pharmaceutical effluents have specific corrosion requirements for floor drainage channels and pipework • A contaminated rainwater event where process effluent enters the stormwater system can result in pollution control board action that shuts the entire industrial estate; correct drainage design is a regulatory obligation, not just a design preference |
5. Loading Docks and Vehicle Access • Loading dock height: standard dock-height loading bays are designed for 1.2m above internal finished floor level matching the standard truck bed height for 40-foot containers • Dock equipment: dock levellers (hydraulic or mechanical), dock seals or shelters, and dock impact protection must be specified and installed during building construction retrofitting them into an existing structure is expensive • Vehicle turning radii: the external hardstanding and road layout within the plot must accommodate the turning circle of the largest vehicle expected a 40-foot articulated trailer requires a minimum 25m turning radius; this affects the building footprint position on the plot • Grade-level access doors: in addition to dock-level bays, oversized grade-level access doors (minimum 4.5m high x 4.5m wide for most industrial uses) are required for equipment delivery, maintenance access, and emergency egress |
6. Expansion Provision • Industrial tenants grow and the buildings that accommodate growth retain tenants; those that cannot accommodate growth lose them • Design for longitudinal extension by fitting the end frame of the building with a strippable end cladding panel arrangement and designing the end columns for the additional wind loads from the extension • Size foundations and columns for the ultimate building footprint even if only the first phase is being built the marginal cost of upsizing a foundation during initial construction is far lower than the cost of retrofitting a larger footing under a completed building • Mezzanine floor provisions: if a mezzanine will be added in the future, specify beam-to-column connections that can accept additional mezzanine floor beams without modification to the primary structure |
Why Steel Is the Dominant Construction System for Industrial Parks
Pre-engineered steel buildings dominate industrial park construction in India not because of preference or tradition, but because the economics, the timeline, and the performance characteristics of PEB construction are superior to every alternative for the application.
Speed and phased delivery
Industrial park developers face a specific programme challenge: they need buildings ready when tenants sign leases, and tenant interest typically arrives in waves as the park gains traction. A PEB shed can be designed, fabricated, and erected in 14 to 20 weeks allowing the developer to respond to signed leases quickly rather than maintaining large quantities of pre-built speculative inventory. The ability to erect one shed per quarter, in direct response to committed demand, is a cash flow management capability that RCC construction cannot match.
Scalability across unit sizes
Industrial parks must provide units across a range of sizes from 2,000 sq. ft. starter units to 50,000 sq. ft. anchor tenant buildings on the same infrastructure. PEB is one of the few structural systems that maintains its economic efficiency and engineering rigour across this entire size range. A basic shed loses its structural credibility above 15m span; RCC becomes disproportionately expensive below 500 sq. m. PEB is the only system that works at every point on the range.
Relocatability and reversibility
Some industrial park developers particularly in KINFRA parks where the zone authority retains land ownership need to consider whether structures can be modified or repurposed as tenant mix changes. A PEB structure can be disassembled and re-erected in a different configuration far more practically than an RCC building can be modified. This reversibility has real option value for a developer who is not certain about the long-term tenant mix of a new park.
Kerala-specific climate performance
Kerala’s industrial parks are not in a benign climate. The Koratty and Adimali KINFRA parks receive heavy rainfall; the coastal parks at Kasaragod and Thiruvananthapuram are in salt-air environments; the Palakkad region experiences extreme summer heat. PEB systems specified with Galvalume or JSW Colouron-coated cladding, SMP or PVDF paint systems, stainless steel fasteners, and correct insulation are designed for these conditions. Basic shed construction in these locations typically requires major cladding replacement within 8 to 12 years a maintenance burden that erodes the developer’s yield and irritates tenants.
Selecting the Right Contractor for an Industrial Park Project
The selection criteria for a contractor on an industrial park project are more demanding than for a standalone building because the consequences of delays, quality failures, and specification errors extend across the entire park’s development timeline and reputation.
What to look for
- Industrial park track record: has the contractor built within notified industrial areas, SEZs, or KINFRA parks before? Zone authority approval processes, co-ordination with park infrastructure contractors, and compliance with estate-specific requirements are learned by experience, not first principles
- In-house fabrication: contractors who fabricate structural steel in their own facility can control quality, manage programme dependencies, and respond to design changes without involving a third-party fabricator whose own production schedule is outside the contractor’s control
- Structural engineering documentation: zone authorities and institutional lenders require IS-code-compliant structural drawings; the contractor must be able to provide or coordinate engineering documentation to this standard, not just build from sketches
- Parallel project capability: if you are a park developer who may need multiple units built simultaneously, confirm the contractor’s fabrication capacity and erection crew availability for parallel work programmes
- Kerala construction experience: local knowledge of permit processes, monsoon planning, and the supply chain for materials and specialist trades is not replaceable by general capability; a contractor who has never built in Kerala will learn at your project’s expense
Questions to ask before appointing
- How many industrial park or SEZ projects have you completed in Kerala, and can you provide references from the zone authority and the tenants?
- Where is your fabrication facility, and what is your current production capacity and committed load?
- Can you provide IS 800-compliant structural drawings and design calculations stamped by a qualified structural engineer of record?
- What is your experience with KINFRA park approvals / CSEZ approval processes?
- How do you manage programme during the Kerala monsoon season?
Lee Builders in Kerala's Industrial Park Sector
Lee Builders has been building in Kerala’s industrial corridors since 1995 – a period that spans the early development of the Kinfra park network, the expansion of the Cochin SEZ, the growth of the Ernakulam private industrial estate cluster, and the emergence of the new logistics zone around Vizhinjam.
Capability | Industrial park relevance |
In-house fabrication, Perumbavoor, Ernakulam | Central location for delivery across Ernakulam, Thrissur, Kottayam, Idukki within the core Kinfra and CSEZ catchment |
29+ years Kerala industrial construction | Experience with zone authority approvals, monsoon programme planning, Kerala ground conditions, and climate-specific specification |
Full PEB system delivery | Design coordination, fabrication, erection, cladding, drainage, loading docks complete building package for developer or tenant clients |
IS 800 structural engineering capability | Structural drawings and design calculations meeting zone authority and lender requirements |
Multi-unit project experience | Capability to manage parallel fabrication and erection of multiple units relevant for park developers building more than one shed simultaneously |
JSW roofing sheet supply | Direct access to JSW Colouron+ and Galvalume cladding for Kerala’s coastal and high-humidity zones no third-party procurement delay |
Transparent programme and cost | Written programme with milestone dates and itemised cost estimates the documentation standard that institutional developers and zone authorities require |
Conclusion
Kerala’s industrial park and SEZ sector is at a development inflection point. The Vizhinjam port ecosystem is creating new logistics demand in the south; the Kochi metropolitan industrial belt is maturing into Grade A specification; and the KINFRA theme park network is attracting more sophisticated manufacturing tenants who require more from their buildings than a basic shed can provide.
For developers, the choice between Grade A PEB specification and basic shed provision is a strategic decision that determines which tenants the park can attract and what rents it can sustain not just a construction cost question. For tenants, the quality of the building they commission or occupy is a direct operational constraint a building that cannot accommodate their process, their equipment, their crane, or their future expansion will limit the business that can be conducted within it.
Lee Builders is positioned within Kerala’s industrial construction market with the fabrication capability, the track record, and the zone-authority experience to serve both developer and tenant clients from the smallest KINFRA starter unit to the largest logistics facility in the Vizhinjam corridor.





