Master Plan Design Logic
Purva Kudlu Gate is planned on 1.7 acres with a single tower configuration. This is a deliberate choice. Many developments in the same budget bracket solve density by multiplying towers, which can create internal crowding, overlapping views, and elevated dependence on common circulation zones. Here, the planning language indicates an inverse strategy: maintain tighter control over building footprint and push more value into open-space quality.
The project communication highlights roughly seventy-six percent open area. In practical planning terms, this often translates into better breathing room around building edges, more meaningful amenity placement, and improved visual permeability from apartments and circulation spaces. 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: 3 basements + ground + ~20 residential floors. By concentrating parking and services below grade and keeping residential floors elevated, the plan can separate vehicular burden from resident lifestyle zones. This usually improves both acoustic comfort and the experiential quality of podium-level amenities.
Single-Tower Strategy, Privacy, and Movement Flow
The single-tower arrangement is meaningful beyond architecture aesthetics. It allows floor plates to be managed with stronger privacy intent, especially when paired with measured residences-per-floor logic and lift distribution designed for a focused resident pool. The project narrative references eight homes per floor and four lifts in total. If executed as specified, this creates a near-private movement profile in comparison to large-density towers where lift load becomes a daily friction point.
From a user perspective, master planning should be tested against three movement loops: arrival loop, daily vertical loop, and lifestyle loop. Arrival loop covers drop-off and transition from entry to private zones. Vertical loop covers wait times and lift congestion risks. Lifestyle loop covers access quality to amenities, open spaces, and recreation nodes. Purva Kudlu Gate’s plan language attempts to optimize all three loops by reducing corridor load and preserving open-zone continuity.
Buyers should still validate these assumptions during the final documentation stage by asking for the latest master plan sheet, lift core details, and amenity placement plan. A premium launch is strongest when architecture narrative and engineering reality are aligned.
1.7-Acre Footprint and the 76% Open-Space Discipline
The Codename Kudlu Gate master plan consolidates approximately 145 residences onto a single ~20-floor tower across 1.7 acres of Hosur Road frontage — an unusually restrained footprint for a corridor where most launches stretch 4–8 tower townships across 4–8 acres with 500–1,200 units. The tower footprint occupies only about 12 percent of the site, with roughly 76 percent reserved as open space, landscape, and amenity zones. On 1.7 acres, that 76 percent translates to approximately 56,000 square feet of pedestrian-first ground plane — meaningful breathing room for a 145-unit boutique tower. The tower itself is positioned towards the western interior of the parcel, with the Hosur Road frontage acting as a buffer between the building base and the arterial corridor, absorbing road noise through the forecourt, driveway, and landscape before it reaches the residential lobby. This pull-back also creates a deep landscaped forecourt rather than a thin perimeter strip and allows every apartment to face an open aspect.
Central Courtyard, Amenity Clusters and the Bus Bay
The interior of the site, between the tower and the perimeter, hosts the active recreation cluster. The mini soccer court, pickle ball court, and outdoor gym sit on one axis, while the children's play area and pet zone form the family-life cluster on the other. The tree deck and gallery seating create transitional landscape zones with shaded slow-seating for residents who want to be near the activity without being in it. A single controlled Entry & Exit on Hosur Road leads into a roundabout anchored by a feature wall that doubles as wayfinding and a privacy screen, with a perimeter driveway routing vehicular movement around the site to the basement ramps. A dedicated bus bay at the Hosur Road interface creates an organised stop for BMTC buses, corporate shuttles, school buses, and ride-share pickups — a detail most Bengaluru high-rises miss, leading to disorganised vehicle clustering at the main gate.
Eight Units per Floor, Four Lifts and Basement Infrastructure
The tower is configured as a central-core stack of eight units per floor served by four lifts, sized to keep lift wait times short and shared-corridor traffic manageable across the ~145-residence community. Below grade, the basement levels accommodate all parking (with every bay EV-capable as a base specification — conduit, point-of-load wiring, and metering provisions embedded at construction rather than retrofitted), the on-site sewage treatment plant with treated-water reuse for landscape and flushing, rainwater harvesting collection from roof and surface routed to recharge and storage, the dedicated electrical substation, DG backup for essential and apartment loads, fire and life-safety infrastructure including NBC-compliant detection and sprinklers, and the water tank infrastructure with combined borewell and Cauvery/BWSSB sourcing. Utility, refuse, and back-of-house movement are routed via the bus bay and perimeter driveway — separated from the residential entry experience by design.