DASHOPIA The title “Dasopia” is derived from the combination of “Dashboard” and “Utopia”, representing the vision of a perfect system for building enterprise admin interfaces and dashboards. It reflects the project’s goal of creating a low-code platform that enables engineers to rapidly develop internal tools with minimal manual coding. Dasopia emphasizes efficiency, scalability, and flexibility, allowing seamless integration with databases and APIs, reusable components, and customizable interfaces. By simplifying complex development tasks, the system reduces time, effort, and cost, while ensuring a user-friendly and maintainable environment. In essence, Dasopia embodies an ideal solution for rapid, reliable, and efficient construction of enterprise admin panels and dashboard PROBLEM STATEMENT “Low-Code Systems for Rapid Construction of Enterprise Admin Interfaces” ABSTRACTION Engineers often spend several months developing internal admin panels and dashboards for enterprise applications. These tools involve repetitive tasks such as designing user interfaces, managing data, implementing role-based access control, and generating reports, which increases development time and cost. This paper presents a low-code system for the rapid construction of enterprise admin interfaces that minimizes manual coding through configurable components and visual development tools. The proposed approach enables seamless integration with databases and APIs, allowing developers to quickly build functional and scalable admin panels. By adopting a low-code methodology, organizations can significantly reduce engineering effort, improve productivity, and accelerate the deployment of internal enterprise tools. The study highlights the effectiveness of low-code systems in addressing the challenges of traditional admin panel development. OBJECTIVE The objective of this study is to analyze how low-code systems enable the rapid construction of enterprise admin interfaces and internal dashboards. It aims to understand the challenges engineers face when building internal tools using traditional development approaches and to examine how low-code platforms address these challenges by reducing development time and effort. The study also focuses on analyzing the architecture and key features of low-code platforms such as Retool, evaluating their impact on developer productivity and organizational efficiency, and reviewing real-world enterprise adoption. Additionally, the objective includes identifying limitations, security considerations, and future directions of low-code systems in enterprise software development.