Bengaluru
Located near the threshold of Bannerghatta National Park, the development draws its character from an unusually rich natural setting. The site is defined not by a flat real-estate parcel, but by existing tree cover, quarries, water bodies, and varied contours. The masterplan responds by treating these features as assets to be retained and amplified, allowing the community to feel immersed in landscape rather than merely bordered by it.
The development is organised across two parcels with sixteen towers, set within approximately eleven acres of integrated landscape. Vehicular movement is kept to the periphery, while pedestrian pathways, shaded open areas, and green connections shape the experience within. This gives the project a calmer internal life and allows the open spaces to function as more than residual amenity, becoming the true connective tissue of the community.
The residential planning is equally deliberate. Towers are positioned to preserve privacy, avoid direct overlooking, and open homes toward the strongest views, whether to the forest belt, Kere Angala, the quarries, or the internal landscape. Living spaces and bedrooms face outward for daylight and ventilation, while naturally ventilated cores and basements support a more climate-responsive approach to high-rise living.
A standalone clubhouse overlooking the pool, viewing decks at different levels, and towers placed amid existing foliage reinforce the project’s central idea: not density softened by landscaping, but a residential enclave shaped fundamentally by nature. What emerges is a rarer proposition for Bengaluru, a vertical community that offers the scale of a major development while retaining the atmosphere, privacy, and spatial generosity of a landscape retreat.