Aerial three-tower view
The signature establishing frame: three B + G + 23 towers spread across the 5.5-acre parcel with landscaped ground between them. The frame that communicates the low-density thesis at a glance.
Architectural renders, master-plan vignettes, and interior visualisations of a low-density, large-format community in Yelahanka New Town.
At launch stage, the gallery's job is to communicate the project's defining quality - density, or rather the deliberate lack of it - in a way a price sheet cannot. The frames below show the spacing between towers, the proportion of green to built area, the corner-light apartment positions, and the duplex-penthouse format. On a site visit, the inter-tower spacing and the central green read very differently from the way a dense-tower community reads, and these visuals set that expectation. In the same Bengaluru market, Fortune Primero Seven Sarjapur helps keep the gallery review tied to design evidence rather than only the most polished render or model-flat image.
The signature establishing frame: three B + G + 23 towers spread across the 5.5-acre parcel with landscaped ground between them. The frame that communicates the low-density thesis at a glance.
A ground-to-sky view of a single tower, showing the facade articulation, the balcony rhythm that reflects the four-per-floor plate, and the corner glazing that gives each apartment its two-faced light.
The central clubhouse seen from the green, positioned to be reachable on foot from all three towers - the amenity precinct as the social heart of the community.
The pool and surrounding deck set within the landscape. Because the pool serves only 270 households, the frame conveys a resort-like, uncrowded character rather than a queue-prone shared facility.
A view through the landscaped ground between two towers - the green corridor residents move through to reach the clubhouse. What the low built footprint buys: usable green rather than tight setback strips.
The central green with the jogging track, the tennis and half-basketball courts, the outdoor fitness zone, and the children's and senior zones in adjacent pockets of the landscape.
A representative living-dining visualisation showing the wide bay, the corner glazing that the four-per-floor plate makes possible, and the scale of a 1,968-2,200 sq ft home.
A representative master-suite visualisation - the bed zone, the wardrobe wall, the en-suite, and the corner light that distinguishes a low-density apartment.
The pool-retreat and cabana leisure zone - the leisure layer of the amenity precinct, sized for a 270-household community rather than a mega-township.
Renders communicate intent; they cannot communicate density. The single most important quality of DivyaSree Yelahanka - the spacing between the three towers, the proportion of landscaped ground to built footprint, the way a four-unit floor plate reads as a private landing rather than a shared corridor - is best experienced on site rather than on screen.
When you walk the site, the frames to reconstruct in person are: the distance between the towers (does the green read as usable space), the floor plate (does the four-unit landing feel private), the apartment light (does the corner glazing deliver two-sided daylight), and the amenity scale (do the pool, gym, and courts feel built for a few hundred homes or for a thousand). The renders and visualisations are representative of design intent; final built finishes and landscape maturity may vary, and unit-specific layouts should be confirmed against the stamped floor plans.
Because the project is at new-launch stage, the gallery is built around architectural renders, master-plan vignettes, and representative interior visualisations rather than completed photography. Treat them as design intent and confirm inclusions against the brochure and stamped sanctioned plan.
The aerial shows the three B + G + 23 towers spread across the 5.5-acre parcel with landscaped ground between them and the central green anchoring the composition - the visual thesis statement of the low-density design.
Yes. The penthouse frames convey the duplex format - two levels connected by a private internal stair and a feature volume in the living zone - the townhouse-inside-a-tower character that the Yelahanka locality rarely offers.
Because the pool, gym, and courts serve only 270 households, the amenity renders convey a resort-like, uncrowded character rather than a queue-prone shared facility - the practical expression of the low-density model.
Yes. Request the gallery set - renders, master plan, and floor-plan drawings - and a site-visit slot through the contact page to read the inter-tower spacing and the parcel in person.
No. Render colours, furniture, fittings, and landscaping are illustrative and not contractual. The binding specification is the one written into the agreement and the cost sheet; a built show apartment is more reliable evidence than any interior render.