Master Plan Design Logic
Purva Grand Hills is planned on 7 acres with a single-tower configuration. This is a deliberate choice. Most new-launch projects on the Devanahalli airport corridor are mega-townships - thousands of apartments across thirty-plus towers on fifty-to-sixty-acre parcels. Here, the planning language indicates the inverse strategy: maintain tight control over the building footprint and push more value into open-space quality.
The project communication highlights roughly 65% open area. In practical planning terms, this often translates into better breathing room around the building edge, more meaningful amenity placement, and improved visual permeability from apartments and circulation spaces. Because a single tower plus a clubhouse occupies only a fraction of 7 acres, the 65% open-space figure is structurally real rather than a marketing rounding - and for end users, that can mean reduced visual fatigue and stronger quality of life over longer occupancy periods.
A second important design decision is vertical stacking: 2 basements + ground + 21 residential floors. By concentrating parking and services below grade and keeping residential floors elevated, the plan separates the vehicular burden from resident lifestyle zones. Because the tower is a 2B+G+21 high-rise, upper-floor apartments gain long-range views across the Devanahalli plateau toward the airport and Nandi Hills direction, while lower floors sit closer to the amenity plane.
Single-Tower Strategy, Privacy, and Movement Flow
The single-tower arrangement is meaningful beyond architecture aesthetics. One tower means one core, one drop-off, one set of basement ramps, and one security gateway - operationally simpler and easier to secure than a multi-tower campus. Three hundred households is a community small enough to form genuine social cohesion: residents recognise their neighbours, the clubhouse and pool are usable on demand rather than perpetually booked, and the gate and lift queues stay short.
From a user perspective, master planning should be tested against three movement loops: the arrival loop, the daily vertical loop, and the lifestyle loop. The arrival loop covers the drop-off and the transition from the entry to the private zones. The vertical loop covers wait times and lift congestion risk. The lifestyle loop covers access quality to the amenities, the open spaces, and the recreation nodes. Purva Grand Hills's plan optimises all three by confining vehicles to the periphery, keeping the lift core serving a few hundred households, and preserving open-zone continuity across the inner landscape.
Buyers should still validate these assumptions during the final documentation stage by asking for the latest master plan sheet, the lift-core details, and the amenity placement plan. A premium launch is strongest when the architecture narrative and the engineering reality are aligned.
7-Acre Footprint and the 65% Open-Space Discipline
The Purva Grand Hills master plan consolidates all 300 apartments onto a single 2B+G+21 tower across 7 acres - an unusually restrained footprint for a corridor where most launches stretch thirty-plus-tower townships across fifty-to-sixty acres with thousands of units. The land-use breakdown allots roughly 12-15% of the plot to the residential tower footprint, 5-7% to the clubhouse and amenity block, 8-10% to driveways, drop-off and basement ramps, 12-15% to the pool deck, courts and play zones, and around 35% to landscaped gardens, tracks, and lawns, with the balance to the screened utility yard. The tower is set back from the Vidya Nagar Cross access road and the NH-44 highway buffer so that primary living-room and bedroom faces look inward and outward over the landscaped open space rather than directly onto the road. The clubhouse sits adjacent to the tower as the social anchor, with the pool deck and the principal amenity cluster arranged in the open zone between the tower and the landscape edge.
Vehicle-Free Inner Landscape and the Pedestrian Network
Vehicular movement is confined to a peripheral driveway, the tower drop-off, and the basement ramps. The inner landscape - the pool deck, the courts, the play zones, the clubhouse approach - is reserved for pedestrians, so residents and children move through the campus without crossing vehicle paths. A single controlled gateway off the Vidya Nagar Cross access road, with a boom barrier, guard cabin, and integrated CCTV and visitor management, handles the entire 300-household community, which keeps the perimeter tight and the visitor flow controlled. A covered drop-off sits at the tower entrance, with entry and exit ramps to the two covered parking levels and a separate, screened service path to the utility yard. The pedestrian network is laid out as a continuous walkable environment - an inner amenity plaza connecting the lobby to the clubhouse and pool, a recreation loop of jogging and walking tracks threading the gardens, and a planted perimeter buffer screening the highway and the service yard.
The Clubhouse and Below-Ground Infrastructure
The clubhouse is the indoor anchor of the amenity programme, positioned adjacent to the tower so the social facilities are a short, level walk from every apartment. Sized for a 300-household community, it carries the air-conditioned multipurpose / banquet hall, the gymnasium and fitness studio, the indoor games room, the yoga and meditation room, the mini theatre, the co-working and business lounge, the library, the crèche, and the salon-and-wellness suite, with the outdoor amenities arranged in the landscape immediately around it. Below grade, the two covered basement levels accommodate all parking (with EV-charging provision embedded at construction), the on-site sewage treatment plant with treated-water reuse, rainwater-harvesting collection and recharge pits, the domestic water tanks and pump rooms, the fire-fighting tanks and pumps, the DG rooms and BESCOM transformer yard, and the Organic Waste Converter. The DG yard, transformer, and OWC sit at the service edge with planted screening, keeping mechanical noise and waste handling at a polite distance from the residential core and the amenity plane.