The Municipal Company of Gurugram (MCG) has partnered with the Indian Institute of Know-how (IIT) Gandhinagar to launch the pilot part of the ‘Rain-to-Resilience’ system — a science-based initiative geared toward enhancing flood prediction and concrete drainage planning.
The mission, beneath the Airawat Analysis Basis, is designed to create an built-in technological framework that permits advance flood forecasting, real-time monitoring and data-driven decision-making to curb waterlogging throughout monsoons, mentioned officers.
Motion plan
MCG commissioner Praveen Dahiya mentioned the primary part of the mission, scheduled for implementation inside a 12 months, can be led by IIT Gandhinagar’s Machine Intelligence and Resilience (MIR) Lab, which is able to oversee scientific modelling, system design and technical validation.
In the meantime, AirSQU ClimSol Pvt. Ltd., a startup incubated at IIT Gandhinagar, will develop operational interfaces, together with 3D visualisation instruments and dashboards to help field-level decision-making, mentioned MCG officers.
Sensible flood sensors
Dahiya mentioned that Made-in-India flood-depth and drainage-health sensors — units that measure water ranges and assess the useful situation of drainage networks — can be put in at waterlogging-prone places throughout the town. “These sensors will seize information on water ranges, drainage capability, silt accumulation and blockages,” he mentioned.
The true-time information can be built-in with platforms equivalent to Aqua Twin and Rain-to-Flood, enabling authorities to anticipate flood conditions, officers mentioned, including that the sensor community may even function the muse for a future citywide growth.
All sensor information can be saved on encrypted servers situated inside India and managed by MCG and IIT Gandhinagar. Officers clarified that no international cloud or exterior servers can be used, guaranteeing compliance with the Digital Private Information Safety Act, 2023, and authorities information localisation necessities.
Within the first 12 months, software program platforms can be offered to the civic physique with out licensing charges. Nonetheless, MCG will procure the sensor {hardware}, with the preliminary {hardware} value at roughly ₹20 lakh, Dahiya added. All gear can be dealt with by the municipal company, whereas technical upkeep can be overseen by IIT Gandhinagar.
“If the pilot mission proves profitable, the second part will contain citywide deployment, 24×7 operations and superior modelling companies beneath a Software program-as-a-Service (SaaS) mannequin, with an estimated annual value of round ₹30 lakh,” he mentioned.
Officers described the initiative as a “Made in India, designed for Gurugram” resolution that would assist transition the town from typical drainage practices to a wiser, data-driven and resilient city flood administration mannequin.




