Brigade Granada gallery - towers, clubhouse, greens
Brigade Granada's visual identity turns on a single contrast: vertical density paired with open, green, pedestrian ground. The towers concentrate ~2,000 Phase 1 homes upward across 24 floors; the master plan keeps four-fifths of the site open as landscape; and the podium spine connects the two so the township reads as a walkable garden neighbourhood at eye level.
Reading the township through its imagery
The aerial view is the establishing shot of Brigade Granada: the full Phase 1 cluster of 14 towers across roughly 20.19 acres of the ~40-acre master plan, set on the Whitefield–Hoskote Main Road at Sannatammanahalli, Kadugodi. From above, the organising logic is immediately clear — compact tower footprints rising from a predominantly green ground, with the landscaped open space, the podium spine, and the clubhouse-and-retail core threaded between them. The tower-facade visual shows a single high-rise — 3 basements, ground, and 24 floors — in close elevation, while the podium-spine imagery captures the continuous, car-free landscaped corridor that links every tower lobby to the clubhouse, the retail high street, the play zones, and the senior-citizen corner.
The clubhouse visual shows Brigade Granada's standalone signature clubhouse — more than 30,000 sq.ft. of recreation and community space — housing the gymnasium, the swimming pool, indoor games, multipurpose halls, and wellness spaces. The retail visual shows the integrated high-street stretch that brings everyday shopping, services, and dining inside the gates, exactly the kind of non-residential block Brigade builds and operates in-house through its Orion Malls vertical. The green-network visual captures the 80%-open-space majority — landscaped gardens, jogging and walking trails, sports courts, children's play zones, and the quiet green pockets that make up the township's primary amenity.
For a pre-launch project, the gallery does a specific job: it makes a township that does not yet physically exist legible as a coherent place. Brigade Granada's imagery is sequenced to build that understanding from the largest scale down to the most personal. The township aerial establishes the whole — how 14 towers sit on a predominantly green ground beside the Whitefield–Hoskote Road. The tower facade and the podium spine fix the two structural ideas — vertical homes, horizontal car-free landscape — that the master plan is built on. The clubhouse and the retail high street show the social heart, the places residents will gather and shop. The green network and the apartment interiors close the sequence at the scale of daily life — the gardens a family walks through, the living room they come home to.
When the formal renders and the master-plan drawings are released at launch, this same sequence — aerial, tower, spine, clubhouse, retail, green, home — is the framework for reading them, and for checking that the built intent matches the marketed concept. The aerial also situates the township in its corridor: the Whitefield technology cluster to the west, the Kadugodi Tree Park metro nearby, and the Hoskote-bound arterial running east, so the establishing shot doubles as a connectivity diagram.
What to look for in the Brigade Granada visuals
For a pre-launch project, the gallery does a specific job: it makes a township that does not yet physically exist legible as a coherent place. Brigade Granada's imagery is sequenced to build that understanding from the largest scale down to the most personal — aerial, tower, spine, clubhouse, retail, green, and home. This top-down-to-personal sequence matters because the value proposition of a township is spatial, not just numerical: "forty acres, 14 towers, 80% open space" is a set of statistics, and the imagery is what turns those statistics into a place a buyer can imagine living in.
When reviewing the imagery, a few details repay attention: the ratio of green to built in the aerial, confirming the 80%-open-space claim reads at eye level; the separation of vehicles from people via the podium spine; the scale of the standalone clubhouse, sized for a community of thousands; the orientation of the towers toward the open green core rather than into neighbouring towers; and the integration of the retail high street as a walkable, active edge on the spine. Brigade Granada is an early pre-launch project, so the imagery represents the township's design intent; the formal renders, master-plan drawings, and unit-level visuals are released at launch. The master plan page explains the layout the gallery depicts, and the amenities page details the clubhouse and outdoor programme.
These cues are what distinguish a genuine integrated township from an apartment cluster with landscaping, and they are what the imagery is there to demonstrate. The orientation point in particular is worth dwelling on: units that face the open green core rather than into neighbouring towers drive both the living experience and the in-project price premium, so the way the aerial and the facade imagery resolve that question carries directly into value. Read together, the visuals are sequenced to move a buyer from the top-down statistics of "forty acres, 14 towers, 80% open space" to the lived sense of a place they can picture coming home to.
Amenity and recreation imagery
Beyond the headline visuals, the Brigade Granada gallery includes the recreation and lifestyle imagery that fills out the township experience — the everyday amenity set that turns the open ground and the standalone clubhouse into a working community rather than a render. Each scene maps to a real part of the master plan, from the aquatics zone in the green core to the gated arrival sequence on the main road.
- Swimming pool and pool deck — the clubhouse aquatics zone set within the green core.
- Fitness and wellness — the gymnasium and wellness spaces inside the signature clubhouse.
- Sports courts — the active-recreation facilities laid out on the open ground.
- Children's play zones — the family infrastructure, set safely off the car-free podium spine.
- Senior-citizen corner — the dedicated, accessible zone for older residents, set into a calm part of the landscape.
- Arrival and gated entry — the township's main entrance on the Whitefield–Hoskote Main Road and the arrival sequence into the green core.
Taken together, this recreation imagery is what fleshes out the 80%-open-space claim at human scale: it shows the gardens, courts, and pool deck not as a list of facilities but as the places a household actually uses across a week, all reachable on foot through the landscaped spine rather than across driveways.
Apartment and interior imagery
The apartment-level imagery shows the homes themselves — the spacious, vaastu-compliant 1, 2.5, 3 and 4 BHK layouts, with the living, dining, and bedroom spaces, the balcony outlooks onto the open-green master plan, and the smart-home automation that runs through the residences. These visuals translate the configuration sizes, from roughly 700 to 2,800 sq.ft., into the lived experience of the homes rather than a line in a spec table.
The interior imagery also signals the finish standard — the materials, the fittings, and the spatial proportions — that a buyer can expect, benchmarked against Brigade's delivered apartment portfolio until the Granada-specific show units are ready. Read alongside the tower-facade visual, the interiors complete the move from the building's street presence to the rooms inside it, so the "14 towers, 24 floors" headline resolves all the way down to the balcony a resident steps onto and the green outlook they see from it.
Connectivity and context imagery
A township's location is part of its visual story, and the context imagery situates Brigade Granada in its corridor: the Whitefield–Hoskote Main Road frontage, the proximity to the Kadugodi Tree Park metro station, and the relationship to the Whitefield technology cluster and the upcoming Peripheral Ring Road. Location maps and context renders show how the address connects to ITPL, Hoodi, the schooling and healthcare catchment, and the metro spine — the connectivity that underpins both the daily convenience and the investment case.
For a corridor still maturing, this context imagery is what frames the township not as an isolated development but as a node in East Bengaluru's fastest-evolving growth axis. It is the visual counterpart to the aerial: where the aerial shows the township looking inward at its own green core, the context maps show it looking outward at the metro, the tech parks, and the arterial road network that give the address its reach. The location page sets out those distances and connections in detail.
A note on pre-launch imagery
Brigade Granada is an early pre-launch project, so the gallery imagery represents the township's design intent and architectural language rather than a photograph of a finished building. The final built form follows the approved plans and the sale agreement, and the formal renders, the master-plan drawings, and the unit-level visuals are released at launch.
The imagery here is the most accurate available representation of the integrated-township concept at the pre-launch stage — the towers over open green, the podium spine, the standalone clubhouse, and the retail core. When the launch material arrives, the same reading sequence applies: walk the aerial, the tower, the spine, the clubhouse, the retail, the green, and the home, and check that the built intent matches the marketed concept before committing. To see the address in person and review the formal renders and floor plans with the Brigade sales team, arrange a visit via the contact page.
Brigade Granada gallery FAQ
Common questions on the Brigade Granada images, whether they are renders, the clubhouse, and site visits.
What does the Brigade Granada gallery show?
The gallery shows the integrated-township concept: the 14-tower Phase 1 aerial across ~20.19 acres, a residential tower facade, the car-free podium spine, the standalone 30,000-plus-sq.ft. clubhouse, the integrated high-street retail, and the 80%-open landscaped green network.
Are the Brigade Granada images real photos?
Brigade Granada is an early pre-launch project, so the gallery imagery represents the township's design intent and architectural language. The final built form follows the approved plans and the sale agreement; the formal renders, master-plan drawings, and unit-level visuals are released at launch.
Does the gallery show the clubhouse and amenities?
Yes - the imagery covers the standalone signature clubhouse, the swimming pool and fitness zones, sports courts, children's play zones, the senior-citizen corner, and the landscaped green network, alongside the township aerial, tower facade, and retail high street.
Can I see Brigade Granada in person?
Yes. To walk the Whitefield-Hoskote Road site at Kadugodi, see the tower positions and the master-plan layout, and review the formal renders and floor plans with the Brigade sales team, arrange a visit via the contact page.
What should I look for in the visuals?
Check the ratio of green to built in the aerial, the separation of vehicles from people via the podium spine, the scale of the standalone clubhouse, the orientation of the towers toward the open green core, and the integration of the retail high street along the spine.
See Brigade Granada in person
Imagery conveys the concept; a site visit conveys the address. To walk the Whitefield–Hoskote Road site at Kadugodi and review the formal renders and floor plans with the Brigade sales team, arrange a visit.
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