Home » IGBC
The Indian Green Building Council (IGBC), part of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) was formed in the year 2001. The vision of the council is, “To enable a sustainable built environment for all and facilitate India to be one of the global leaders in the sustainable built environment by 2025”. The council is committee-based, member-driven and consensus-focused. All the stakeholders of construction industry comprising of architects, developers, product manufacturers, corporate, Government, academia and nodal agencies participate in the council activities through local chapters. The council also closely works with several State Governments, Central Government, World Green Building Council, bilateral multi-lateral agencies in promoting green building concepts in the country.
The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) works to create and sustain an environment conducive to the development of India, partnering Industry, Government and civil society, through advisory and consultative processes. CII is a non-government, not-for-profit, industry-led and industry-managed organization, with over 9000 members from the private as well as public sectors, including SMEs and MNCs, and an indirect membership of over 300,000 enterprises from 294 national and regional sectoral industry bodies.
IGBC is India’s Premier certification body, headquartered at Hyderabad. Green building movement today is a Pan India movement with over 10,930 projects with green footprint of over 10.26 billion sq.ft., making India the second country with largest green building footprint in the world. IGBC is working closely with Government of India on green building projects for more than 1000 projects across the country.
The objective of IGBC Student Chapter is to bring in Industry academia collaboration in creating awareness on Green Building concepts, latest trends & technologies to enrich the knowledge of students.
“To enable a sustainable built environment for all and facilitate India to be one of the global leaders in the sustainable built environment by 2025”.