Brigade Old Madras Road Gallery

This visual walkthrough of Brigade Old Madras Road sets out how the township is designed to look and feel — from the seven-block aerial down to the texture of the residential lobby. As a pre-launch project, these are the curated renders that define the experience: the skyline-anchoring towers, the car-free podium, the clubhouse, and the retail-and-hospitality frontage that turns the address into a destination. Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu is useful when buyers are reading images for practical signals: light, approach, amenity scale, landscape maturity, and what still needs official confirmation.

Brigade Old Madras Road Image Gallery

Township aerial, residential tower facade, podium landscape, clubhouse, retail boulevard and arrival spaces.

What the Renders Capture at Brigade Old Madras Road

The township aerial communicates the single most important idea about Brigade Old Madras Road: everything a resident needs sits inside one secured boundary — you can trace the walk from a residential lobby to the office tower, the school, the hospital and the mall without a car. The tower-facade render captures the clean, contemporary composition of glazing, stone and recessed balconies climbing 53 floors. The podium render shows the car-free deck above the basement parking where children move safely between play areas, while the clubhouse and sports-club renders convey resort-grade rather than token amenity. The composition deliberately shows the green-to-built ratio that the high-rise strategy makes possible, with the eleven residential towers clustered around a green spine while the office, hospital, hotel, school and mall blocks frame them at lower heights.

The retail boulevard and gated-entry renders show the township's destination quality and its security-and-arrival experience. For the amenity detail behind these visuals see the amenities page, and for how everything is arranged on the parcel see the master plan. Read together, the gallery is less a portfolio of pretty pictures than an evidence file for the city-within-a-city thesis — each image answers a specific question a buyer is already asking about scale, access, calm, safety or skyline presence at Brigade Old Madras Road.

Brigade Old Madras Road — The Design Intent

The design language of Brigade Old Madras Road is deliberately restrained and premium rather than ornate. Across every render, the same architectural principles repeat: horizontal banding to break the vertical mass of a 53-floor tower, sky decks punched into the elevation at intervals to soften scale, and balconies oriented to catch morning light and the long eastern views across lakes and tech parks. At roughly 165 metres, the towers are engineered to read as a single coherent skyline composition rather than a cluster of competing forms — the kind of recognisable landmark that builds resale identity for an address.

The materials palette in the renders carries through into the lobby and amenity spaces: stone, warm wood tones, large planes of glazing, and crisp metal detailing on the lift fronts and entrance doors. The intent is hospitality-tier finish rather than residential-tier, and the design vocabulary is consistent from the gated entrance through the arrival lobby, into the clubhouse, and out onto the podium. Buyers reading the gallery for material cues will see a level of finish that aligns with Brigade's premium-township standard — the same one delivered at the developer's other landmark Bengaluru addresses.

A second design thread visible across the renders is the priority given to landscape. Green appears at every level: ground courts between the towers, an elevated podium garden over the parking basements, rooftop and sky-deck planting on the towers themselves, and water features anchoring the central spine. Native and low-water species keep the campus green year-round while limiting irrigation load. The cumulative effect, captured in scene after scene, is a continuous green experience from lobby to amenity to school drop-off — an outdoor environment that does the heavy lifting on quality-of-life rather than a token strip of lawn between buildings.

Brigade Old Madras Road — Interior Space Planning

The interior renders are indicative of the fit-out tier rather than literal previews of any single unit, and they reward careful reading. Living-dining zones are shown open-plan, finished in neutral palettes that take colour from the light and the view, with large windows and deep balconies framing the eastern skyline. On upper floors, the views become the hero: a Brigade Old Madras Road resident's afternoon light arrives through 53 floors of vertical breathing room, and the renders capture that unobstructed sightline across the corridor's lakes and tech parks.

Bedrooms read as well-proportioned and quietly finished — built-in wardrobe provisioning, plumbing cores grouped to keep wet areas away from sleeping walls, and adequate bedside space for either side of a queen or king bed. Bathrooms in the close-up renders carry branded sanitaryware and CP fittings, a designer mirror-and-vanity composition, and the kind of joinery that signals a builder using consistent specifications across thousands of homes rather than improvising per unit. Kitchens carry the framework for modular fit-out — a utility tail behind, plumbing and electrical points pre-positioned for a washer, hob, hood and refrigerator, and a clean run of counter against the window.

Two interior decisions tend to differentiate Brigade townships from lower-tier competition, and both show through in the renders. The first is door hardware: substantial, well-detailed main doors and consistent internal-door specifications. The second is the floor itself — vitrified-tile finishes selected to take light cleanly across the depth of the living space. Buyers should read these details as the standard against which any post-handover customisation is layered, not against. The fit-out base is more than the bare shell other developers deliver, which is what makes the move-in experience at Brigade Old Madras Road materially faster than at comparable launches.

Brigade Old Madras Road — The Podium & Common Areas

If the towers are the skyline statement, the podium is the daily-life statement at Brigade Old Madras Road. The podium-landscape render shows an elevated deck above the four basement levels of parking, sized to absorb the open-space programme of an 11-tower residential precinct. Visible across the scene are landscaped lawns, shaded seating courts, water features anchoring sightlines, and walking loops that thread through planting rather than along edges. The single most consequential planning decision in the master plan is captured here: parking pushed underground so the surface belongs to people and greenery, with children moving between play areas without crossing a road.

The clubhouse render frames the social and fitness heart of the community — the glazed clubhouse facade housing the gym, indoor games, multipurpose halls and lounge corners, with the tower cluster as a backdrop. The infinity-edge swimming pool is shown on the open-sky pool deck, sun-deck loungers arranged along its length, and a separate children's pool nearby for safe family use. The image conveys scale: a 5,600-home community justifies amenity infrastructure that smaller projects cannot, and what the render shows is resort-grade rather than token facility — a destination residents gravitate to daily rather than visit on weekends.

The arrival lobby render rounds out the common-area set. Townships at this tier treat the lobby as a hospitality space, not a passage: a double-height arrival finished in stone and warm wood tones, a concierge desk, lounge seating, and clean sightlines through to the podium garden beyond. Lift banks are sized to keep wait times short even in a 53-floor tower, with passenger and service lifts segregated so resident movement is never delayed by a building-services load. The cumulative read across the lobby, podium and clubhouse is consistent: Brigade Old Madras Road treats common space as the genuine amenity it is, not a corridor between private apartments.

Brigade Old Madras Road — How to Read These Renders

A few notes on how a serious buyer should read the Brigade Old Madras Road gallery, since renders carry more signal than the casual viewer extracts from them. First, the aerial is the trust document: it shows the relationship between the residential precinct and the non-residential blocks, the green-to-built ratio, and the secured boundary that defines the township. Second, the tower facade render encodes the floor-rise logic — the visible sky decks and balcony rhythm at intervals tell you how the elevation breaks into bands, and the high-floor units sit above those bands with the cleanest views.

Third, the podium and clubhouse renders show amenity scale, not just amenity presence. The width of the deck, the size of the pool relative to the tower cluster, and the breadth of the clubhouse glazing are signals that the developer has engineered a township-grade facility rather than scaled down a standalone-project clubhouse. Fourth, the institutional renders — hospital, school, and the office tower — matter because they make the integrated-township thesis tangible: most residential projects can only point to off-site infrastructure, while at Brigade Old Madras Road the 300-bed hospital block, the buffered school and the Grade-A office tower are integral structures within the master plan.

As a pre-launch project, the gallery is composed of curated artist's-impression renders that describe the announced master plan and design intent. Exact finishes, facade treatment and amenity scope are confirmed against the sanctioned drawings and brochure at booking, and the experience centre will add a scaled township model and sample-flat mock-ups that close the loop between render and built reality. For everything that sits behind these images — the configurations, the pricing and the connectivity story — read on through the rest of the site, then book a site visit through the contact page.

Brigade Old Madras Road Gallery — Frequently Asked Questions

The defining image shows the eleven residential towers clustered around a green podium spine, rising to 53 floors as the tallest forms on the corridor, while the office, hospital, hotel, school and mall blocks frame them at lower heights - communicating that everything a resident needs sits inside one secured boundary.

As a pre-launch project, these are curated artist's-impression renders of the announced master plan and design intent. Exact finishes, facade treatment and amenity scope are confirmed against the sanctioned drawings and brochure at booking.

A clean, contemporary composition of glazing, stone and recessed balconies climbing 53 floors to roughly 165 metres - a restrained, premium design language with sky decks and balconies oriented to catch morning light and the long eastern views, reading as a genuine skyline landmark.

Yes. The gallery captures the institutional and commercial infrastructure most residential projects can only point to off-site - the 30-floor hospital block, the buffered low-rise school, the retail boulevard and the five-star hotel and convention plaza - underlining that these are integral structures, not marketing abstractions.

When the experience centre opens, visitors will typically see a scaled township model, sample-flat mock-ups for the 2 and 3 BHK, and a master-plan walkthrough that ties the renders to the actual parcel on Old Madras Road. Register for renders and a visit via the contact page.

See More of Brigade Old Madras Road

Request the full render set, the brochure and a site visit from the Brigade Old Madras Road sales team.

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