
This 70 ft × 8 ft front-lit hoarding at Tarnaka Metro Portal, facing Mettuguda, offers prominent visibility along one of Hyderabad's well-connected transit corridors. Positioned at a key metro station node, the hoarding benefits from steady commuter movement, vehicular traffic, and pedestrian flow throughout the day. Tarnaka is a mature residential-cum-commercial locality in central Hyderabad, serving as a major junction linking Secunderabad, Osmania University, Uppal, and ECIL through both road and metro networks.
Tarnaka is strategically located in the northeastern part of Hyderabad, approximately 7 km from Secunderabad Junction and along the Osmania University campus vicinity. The area features dense residential settlements, educational institutions, retail clusters, and steady office-going traffic. The Tarnaka Metro Station (Blue Line) serves daily commuters traveling between Secunderabad, Nagole, and MGBS, creating consistent visibility for outdoor advertising. The locality is also surrounded by Mettuguda (an emerging residential zone), Habsiguda (known for IT hubs), and Ramanthapur. The presence of Osmania University, Gandhi Hospital, and multiple engineering colleges ensures a diverse demographic mix.
Estimated Daily Vehicle Traffic: Approximate estimates suggest 30,000–55,000 vehicles/day on the Tarnaka-Mettuguda corridor, driven by metro commuters, college-going students, hospital visitors, and residential traffic.
Estimated Daily Footfall: The metro portal and surrounding bus stops generate approximately 12,000–25,000 pedestrians/day, with spikes during morning and evening hours.
Peak Activity Periods: Typical traffic peaks occur during 7:30 AM–10:00 AM and 5:30 PM–8:30 PM on weekdays. Weekend footfall is moderate, primarily from local residents and students.
Primary Audience: Metro commuters, working professionals, college students, hospital visitors, and residents of Tarnaka, Mettuguda, and Habsiguda.
Advertising Potential: The metro portal location ensures repeated daily exposure to a transit-dependent audience. The hoarding's large horizontal format is ideal for recall-driven campaigns targeting urban commuters.
Important Note: Traffic and footfall figures are approximate estimates for the surrounding locality. Reliable public measurements specific to this hoarding are unavailable.
Estimated traffic, footfall, and reach figures are approximate and based on the characteristics of the surrounding Tarnaka-Mettuguda locality. These are not measured statistics specific to the hoarding. Advertisers are encouraged to conduct independent assessments for campaign planning.