The integration of Flatted Factory Complexes, known as FFCs, into the urban growth strategy of Visakhapatnam is set to redefine the city’s decentralised industrial landscape if everything materialises as per the plans.According to data available from the Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC), these FFC structures are distributed systematically across strategic urban constituencies including Visakhapatnam-East, West, North, and Gajuwaka to capitalise on existing logistical networks and an accessible local workforce.Infrastructure bottlenecks in congested segments are being countered by maximising small parcels of land, ranging from less than an acre to just over two acres. The approach enables micro-manufacturing setups to flourish without triggering the massive displacement or severe land acquisition hurdles typically tied to conventional horizontal industrial estates.Spatial distribution of manufacturing clustersThe geographical spread of these industrial nodes highlights a deliberate policy to integrate manufacturing directly into dense urban pockets. In Mudasarlova, situated within the Visakhapatnam-East constituency, a 2.18-acre Flatted Factory Complex is currently being built with half of its civil works finished. Similarly, at Venkatapuram in the Gopalapatnam mandal, a 1.45-acre FFC block has reached 30% completion.The trend extends further into Gajuwaka, where a 2-acre FFC at Pedagantyada was inaugurated late last year. However, spatial constraints remain highly evident in central zones. The data indicates that for the Visakhapatnam-South constituency, the entire area falls under strict city limits, leaving zero vacant land available on the ground for fresh industrial layouts.Distinguishing structural frameworks of FFC and MSMEUnderstanding the operational differences between Flatted Factory Complexes and standard Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSME) units is vital to grasping the State’s industrial blueprint.FFCs are essentially multi-storeyed, vertical manufacturing facilities designed to optimise minimal land footprints within high-density urban environments, catering specifically to non-polluting, light manufacturing units. Conversely, MSME parks are traditional, expansive industrial estates spread over vast acreages, accommodating comprehensive horizontal setups with independent industrial sheds, extensive internal roads, and heavy utility networks.Urban FFC patches occupy tiny dimensions under 2.5 acres, whereas MSME allocations in suburban or rural zones like Parawada scale up to a significant 116 acres to allow for heavier, space-intensive manufacturing footprints.Project execution timelines show mixed progress across the identified clusters. While the foundation stone for the 0.83-acre FFC at Kapparada in the Visakhapatnam-North constituency was laid on May 25, 2026.In stark contrast, larger horizontal MSME setups are undergoing massive earthworks and foundational development. At Krishnapuram in the Padmanabham mandal, road and drain infrastructure for a 63.70-acre MSME park has achieved 80% completion.Speaking to The Hindu, APIIC zonal manager Mr. Simhachalam said that vertical flatted complexes are proving to be the most viable solution to keep production facilities closer to urban consumer markets while keeping capital expenditure on land acquisition relatively low. Published - May 27, 2026 08:03 pm IST
Govt pushes for Flatted Factory Complexes to drive industrial growth in Vizag
Govt promotes Flatted Factory Complexes in Visakhapatnam to enhance urban industrial growth and optimize land use.










