Genesys rolls out India’s first 3D subsurface mapping tech, secures airport digitisation deal

Genesys International Corporation Ltd., an Indian geospatial technology firm, on Friday, unveiled India’s first 3D subsurface mapping technology, marking a significant step in the country’s digital infrastructure push. The solution, which uses advanced 3D Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) supported by high-precision LiDAR systems, is designed to accurately detect, map, and manage underground utilities—one of the most persistent challenges in global infrastructure development.
The company will undertake the country’s first 3D GPR survey across six airports operated by the Adani Group—including Mumbai, Trivandrum, Lucknow, Jaipur, Guwahati, and Ahmedabad. The project will be followed by the creation of detailed 3D Building Information Modelling (BIM) outputs to generate complete digital representations of airport environments, from external assets to terminal infrastructure.
The mandate, awarded by testing, inspection and certification major Bureau Veritas and valued at ₹17.38 crore, reinforces Genesys’s positioning in next-generation mapping solutions. Bureau Veritas, with a legacy of over 190 years, supports infrastructure development globally through compliance-driven frameworks and technical oversight.

For Genesys, the launch builds on its expanding portfolio of 3D geospatial solutions. The company recently introduced 3D ADAS navigation maps for the automotive sector, which have been adopted by Tata Motors. With geospatial intelligence becoming core to infrastructure planning, logistics, and mobility, the firm is looking to extend its capabilities across more aviation hubs and infrastructure corridors worldwide.
“The launch of India’s first 3D subsurface mapping solution marks a transformative moment in the country’s infrastructure journey,” said Sajid Malik, Chairman & Managing Director, Genesys International. “As global development increasingly depends on precision, safety and digital intelligence, our technologies will set new benchmarks for how large, complex environments are mapped and managed.”
The deployment comes at a time when infrastructure projects in India are scaling rapidly, driving demand for accurate and real-time mapping solutions. Genesys’s move is expected to accelerate the adoption of 3D and digital twin technologies across airports, highways, utilities and smart city assets as India pushes towards data-led execution and lifecycle-based infrastructure management.

In July, Genesys integrated DIGIPIN—India’s standardised digital address system—into its 2D and 3D mapping platforms, strengthening its role in building Digital Public Infrastructure for verified and geocoded addresses. Developed under the Department of Posts’ DHRUVA framework, the solution enables real-time address creation, lookup, and visual verification. The platform holds over 400 million building footprints, 8.3 million km of road networks, and 19,000+ PIN-code zones.
With R&D centres in Chennai, Hyderabad, and Bengaluru and a tenfold expansion to 700 employees, Genesys is working with ministries, Smart Cities, ULBs, and digital service providers to expand verified address infrastructure and improve access to services.
