In 1958, the Indian government constituted a team of engineers, mostly from the
Indian Ordnance Factories Service - called the
Special Weapons Development Team - to research guided missile weapons development. It was founded by
S. P. Chakravarti, the father of Electronics and Telecommunication engineering in India, who also founded the DLRL and the
Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE). This team was later expanded into DRDL, a full-fledged laboratory, in June 1961, at the campus of Defence Science Centre, Delhi. It later shifted to Hyderabad after the state government granted them the former Nizam's army barracks. This was the genesis of the
Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL), under the
Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
Vision and mission Being a design and development house for missile-based weapon systems needed for tactical applications across multiple platforms is the organization's objective. Its aim is to create the cutting-edge technology and infrastructure needed for various class of missiles. Give the production agency the required technology for the guided missiles manufacturing. The DRDO launched
Project Devil and
Project Valiant to reverse engineer Soviet-origin guided missiles and create intercontinental ballistic missiles, respectively, which prompted the DRDL to begin developing missile guidance systems. Although both initiatives were abandoned before they were successful, the work completed aided DRDL in increasing its capacity. Afterwards, this assisted DRDL in leading the
Integrated Guided Missiles Development Program (IGMDP). By 2011, India started producing cutting-edge components in-house and was fully independent in end-to-end missile development. == Products ==