Accenture leases 600,000 sq. ft in Pune for new GCC hub

MUMBAI, INDIA — Accenture has signed a long-term lease for more than 600,000 square feet of office space at Phoenix Millennium Towers in Pune’s Baner micro-market, marking one of India’s largest office leasing deals in recent quarters and clearing the way for a new Global Capability Center (GCC) scheduled to open in two phases through June.
According to a report from The Economic Times, the 15-year agreement carries an estimated rental outgo of more than Rs 325.37 crore — roughly US$39 million — and underscores how aggressively global consulting and technology firms are scaling up their India footprints.
The move comes as India’s office market hits record demand levels, with GCCs driving nearly half of all leasing activity and locking in premium space well ahead of supply tightening.
A strategic consolidation play in Pune’s western corridor
Accenture’s new campus will span nine floors at Phoenix Millennium Towers, a Grade A development that already houses multinational tenants including MUFG Bank, Baker Hughes, and Clean Harbors. The deal is structured in two phases — Phase I valued at Rs 194.16 crore and Phase II at Rs 131.21 crore — with the goal of unifying Accenture’s Pune operations under a single, integrated workspace.
“The move is part of a broader strategy to both expand its operational footprint and consolidate existing teams into a single, integrated campus, enabling operational efficiency, scalability and alignment of functions,” said a person with direct knowledge of the development.
Pune’s western corridor — spanning Baner, Balewadi, and Wakad — has emerged as a high-growth office market driven by talent availability, improving infrastructure, and connectivity to residential clusters, attracting multinational firms looking to expand beyond Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
A booming GCC market reshaping India’s office real estate
Accenture’s lease lands in the middle of a record run for India’s office sector. Gross leasing reached 21.5 million sq ft in the first quarter — the highest ever for any January-to-March period — even as the sector navigates geopolitical pressure and anticipated AI-driven disruption.
GCCs led demand, accounting for 45.5% of total leasing, signaling that global enterprises are racing to secure high-quality, long-term workspaces before supply tightens further.
The Pune deal also reflects “rising pre-commitments for Grade A office space, as occupiers lock in high-quality assets early to secure long-term capacity and pricing certainty in a tightening supply environment,” the report notes. Upcoming infrastructure upgrades, including access to Navi Mumbai International Airport, are expected to sustain momentum in the Baner-Balewadi belt.
The Accenture lease reflects a broader recalibration in the global outsourcing industry, where multinational firms are increasingly investing in India not as a low-cost back office but as a strategic hub for engineering, AI, and consulting work.
As GCCs continue to outpace traditional IT services in office demand and talent absorption, providers across the global outsourcing market face mounting pressure to match the depth, scale, and integration that captive operations now offer enterprise clients.

Independent




