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We walked into Candor Techspace expecting just another dining destination and found a landscaped, palm-lined pocket of Sector 62 instead. Here’s what a weekend visit to Binge Central actually looks like, the food, the footfall, and the rotating attraction that keeps families coming back.
We went to check the hype. What we didn’t expect was how easy it is to miss the whole thing.
Binge Central sits inside Candor Techspace in Sector 62, right on the main road. But unless you already know there’s a full dining and drinking hub tucked inside, you’ll drive past it without a second glance. Unlike Sector 18, where restaurants spill onto busy, visible roads, or DLF Mall, where everything happens indoors, Binge Central feels calmer simply because it’s tucked inside an office campus rather than announcing itself to the street.
Getting there
If you’re coming by metro, know this before you plan the trip: it’s a bit of a distance from Sector 62 metro station, and not a walk you want to attempt in heels. An e-rickshaw from the station is the easier call. If you’re driving down instead, parking inside is ample, so that part is one less thing to worry about.
ps: Barclays sign is the one that is unmissable in this corporate park. You can spot while driving past this business hub.

Walking in
Every visitor goes through a security check at the Candor gates first, standard for a business park, nothing unusual. What we didn’t expect was how good the walk in actually feels. The pedestrian lanes leading up to the Binge Central building are landscaped and manicured, the glass office towers give the campus a polished corporate feel.
There are little pockets to sit along the way too, benches tucked in where you could catch up with a colleague or just sit with your thoughts for a bit before heading back into the grind. pergolas and trellises break up the concrete, and the greenery does a nice job of softening what could otherwise feel like a very corporate, very glass-heavy campus.
As you get closer to Binge Central itself, the comparison that comes to mind is Cyberhub, just at a smaller, more contained scale.

The palm-lined walkway around Binge Central
This is where the design really comes together. A palm-lined walkway circles the building, dotted with sitting benches, clearly built with both aesthetics and intent in mind. It’s the kind of space that invites you to slow down rather than just pass through, and there’s no shortage of Instagram-worthy corners along the way. Whoever planned this campus was thinking about people lingering, not just walking through.
Courtyard dining, not food-court dining
What sets Binge Central apart from a typical mall food court becomes clear once you’re actually inside. Many of the ground-floor restaurants open directly onto their own alfresco seating spilling outdoors, so the whole place feels more like an open-air dining district than anything indoor and air-conditioned. It’s easy to picture people lingering here over evening tea or a slow dinner rather than eating and rushing off.
The building works across multiple levels, and each one has its own character. Ground floor is shaded by palm trees and the same landscaped walkways that run through the rest of the campus, a good pick if you want a quieter, outdoor meal. Head upstairs and the rooftop restaurant offer something else entirely, open-air seating with views out over Candor Techspace’s glass office towers, this is where Romeo Lane sits, and likely why the evening music we heard was drifting down from up there.
Binge Central keeps reinventing itself
One thing that stood out: Binge Central doesn’t sit still. The amphitheater out front runs a rotating lineup of attractions tied to seasons and celebrations, clearly aimed at pulling in families of the corporate staff who work at Candor or live nearby in Sector 62. When we visited, it was a dino park, complete with life-size raptors and a T-rex that had kids and parents stopping every few steps for photos. That one has since wrapped up. Around the monsoon season, they ran a shopping-and-food event themed around the rains. And going by their own teasers, something coding, AI and robotics-themed for kids is next in line. Worth checking what’s currently running before you plan a family visit, since it changes often enough that it’s genuinely part of the draw.

Besides Binge Central, there’s a food court too
Not far from Binge Central is a large food court built for the people actually working inside Candor’s towers, multiple kiosks spread across the space, mostly set up for takeaway or quick sit-down meals. We didn’t spot a name for it distinct from the towers themselves. We swung by, and it was quiet, understandably so, since it was a Saturday and most offices were shut. This one’s clearly built for the weekday lunch crowd rather than a weekend destination, so keep that in mind if you’re headed there hoping for the same buzz as Binge Central.
What’s on offer to eat and drink
Inside Binge Central, there’s a solid mix of dining and drinking spots. A dhaba-style outlet, Beer Cafe, Chaayos, Haldiram’s, a pizza place, and Romeo Lane up on the rooftop for those wanting a resto-bar setting with a view.


After walking around for nearly an hour we settled on Haldiram’s for chaat and chhole bhature, a safe choice, but one that hit the spot. The food was exactly as good as you’d expect. Washrooms on site are standard and well-kept, always good to know when you’re out with kids or planning to stay a while.
The footfall surprise
We visited on a weekend, late afternoon into evening, and honestly, the crowd was thin, both at Binge Central and at the food court nearby. Not what you’d expect from a food hub on a Saturday. From what we’ve heard, weekday evenings right after office hours are a completely different story, when the place actually fills up with the crowd it’s built for. Worth keeping in mind if you’re going purely for the buzz and energy, timing matters here more than the day of the week.
The crowd here tends to skew toward professionals on weekdays, and families specifically when there’s an event or seasonal attraction running, otherwise, as we found, weekends can be quiet.
As the evening rolled on, we could hear music drifting down from Romeo Lane’s rooftop setup, a sign that the place does pick up pace later. We’d already had our fill at Haldiram’s by then, so it felt like the right time to head out. But Romeo Lane’s rooftop is going on our list, we’re planning to come back specifically for a proper dining experience there.
Should you go
If you work nearby or live close enough to make the drive worthwhile, Binge Central is worth a visit, especially on a weekday evening when it’s apparently at its liveliest. For families, keep an eye out for whatever seasonal attraction is currently running in the amphitheatre, it’s clearly become part of the place’s identity. Just plan your commute, e-rickshaw from the metro or drive in, and know you’re walking into a business park before you’re walking into a food hub.
Candor Techspace itself, the office towers, the tenants, the story of how this space works as a commercial destination, is a piece we’re saving for next time.
At a Glance: Binge Central, Candor Techspace
| Location | Candor Techspace, Sector 62, Noida |
| Nearest metro | Sector 62 metro station (not walkable, take an e-rickshaw) |
| Parking | Ample parking available on site if driving down |
| General timings | 11am to 12am (midnight), individual outlet hours may vary |
| Entry | Security check at Candor Techspace gates for all visitors |
| Best for | Weekday evening dining, family outings during seasonal events |
Binge Central Sector 62 Noida – FAQs
A: Binge Central is a short distance (~2km) from Sector 62 metro station, not comfortably walkable, especially in heels. An e-rickshaw is the easier way in, or drive down since parking inside is ample.
A: Surprisingly, no. On a Saturday visit, footfall was noticeably thin. Weekday evenings right after office hours are reportedly when the place picks up the most.
A: The amphitheatre out front regularly hosts rotating, season-linked attractions aimed at families, past editions have included a dino park, with newer themes on the way.
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