As India’s workspace ecosystem evolves amid the rise of Global Capability Centres (GCCs) and digital-first enterprises, Table Space is redefining how large organisations approach offices. The company is leading India’s managed office revolution by offering secure, scalable, and technology-led workspace solutions tailored to enterprise needs.
Enterprise-First Model for Modern Workspaces
“At Table Space, we provide full-stack managed offices with an enterprise-first mindset,” says Karan Chopra, Chairman and Co-CEO, Table Space. “Our workspaces combine design excellence, data intelligence, and enterprise-grade technology to deliver measurable outcomes in experience, efficiency, and performance.”
Unlike conventional coworking models that prioritise short-term occupancy, Table Space’s approach is built on predictive analytics, ESG-aligned design, and compliance-ready infrastructure. The company’s goal is to give global enterprises-including Fortune 500 companies and GCCs the ability to operate in India with the same confidence and performance as their international offices.
“Security, compliance, and consistency are non-negotiable for our clients,” he explains. “We’ve built Table Space around those pillars to make it the preferred partner for future-ready enterprises.”
Robust Growth and Expanding Portfolio
FY25 marked a transformative phase for Table Space. The company achieved 56 per cent year-on-year growth, expanding its managed office portfolio from 6.4 million sq. ft. to 9.9 million sq. ft. across seven major Indian cities. Its client base now includes over 115 enterprises, among them several Fortune 500 companies and leading GCCs.
“Our growth has been fuelled by a clear focus on large enterprises consolidating their India operations,” he says. “We’ve created a platform that helps them scale efficiently while meeting global standards of design, security, and sustainability.”
Technology at the Core of Experience
Technology is central to Table Space’s evolution. Every workspace delivered is equipped with IoT-enabled systems, AI-driven insights, and real-time monitoring to enhance employee experience and operational reliability.
“Technology today is not just about automation it’s about how people feel and perform at work,” he notes. “We use data-led space planning, smart access systems, and intelligent climate and lighting controls to create workplaces that are not just efficient, but human-centric.”
Sector Trends: GCC Growth, Experience-Led Design, and ESG Alignment
He identifies three structural trends shaping India’s office and real estate sector the surge in Global Capability Centres, the rise of technology-driven, experience-led offices, and the growing focus on ESG and sustainability.
India’s attractiveness as a destination for GCCs continues to rise due to its skilled talent pool, competitive costs, and supportive infrastructure. Simultaneously, Tier-2 cities are emerging as new hubs, backed by business-friendly policies and urban growth.
“The future belongs to providers who can blend sustainability with performance,” Chopra says. “ESG-aligned design and compliance are no longer add-ons—they’re strategic imperatives.”
India’s Business Landscape: From Scale to Sustainability
Reflecting on India’s broader startup and business ecosystem, Chopra believes the ongoing phase of disciplined growth is both necessary and healthy. “Sustainability, governance, and profitability have taken precedence over scale at any cost,” he says. “This recalibration is vital for the long-term stability of India’s innovation landscape.”
He expects funding activity to gradually revive, with capital flowing towards companies that demonstrate resilience, clear demand visibility, and customer-centric innovation. “The funding spring will reward real businesses, not just valuations,” he adds.
Vision: Building India’s Global Benchmark
Looking ahead, Chopra envisions India as a global benchmark for innovation, scale, and sustainability. He identifies three transformative forces shaping the next decade: sustained investment in infrastructure and urban transformation, accelerated AI and automation-led productivity, and the rise of purpose-driven entrepreneurship.
“India’s future lies in building enterprises that are globally competitive, digitally native, and purpose-driven,” Chopra concludes. “The convergence of infrastructure, technology, and entrepreneurial intent will define how India works, grows, and leads in the coming decade.”

