HM @ Yelahanka - Gallery

Six representative project visuals for HM @ Yelahanka - the boutique low-rise facade from the Jakkur Main Road approach, the central landscaped courtyard, the boutique clubhouse and pool deck, a Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living-dining interior, the landscaped arrival court at the gated entry, and the night elevation from the road. As an EOI / pre-launch project these are artist's impressions based on the design intent: read them for the architectural language, the low-density master plan, and the boutique amenity scale rather than as photographs of a finished building. For visual checks, Concorde Hennur is a same-city reference that helps separate brochure mood from evidence of elevation, landscape depth, finish cues, and usable community space.

HM @ Yelahanka gallery - six representative project visuals

Artist's impressions of the boutique low-rise facade from the Jakkur Main Road approach, the central landscaped courtyard, the boutique clubhouse and pool deck, a Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living-dining interior, the landscaped arrival court at the gated entry, and the night elevation from the road. Click any tile to enlarge.

Image captions for HM @ Yelahanka

  • HM @ Yelahanka boutique low-rise facade from the Jakkur Main Road approach: Boutique low-rise facade from Jakkur Main Road — HM @ Yelahanka
  • HM @ Yelahanka central landscaped courtyard with lawn framed by the low-rise blocks: Central landscaped courtyard at the heart of the community — HM @ Yelahanka
  • HM @ Yelahanka boutique clubhouse and amenity deck beside the swimming pool: Boutique clubhouse and pool deck at the centre of the community — HM @ Yelahanka
  • HM @ Yelahanka Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living and dining interior with balcony outlook: Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living-dining interior with balcony view — HM @ Yelahanka
  • HM @ Yelahanka landscaped arrival court at the gated single-point entry: Landscaped arrival court at the gated entrance — HM @ Yelahanka
  • HM @ Yelahanka night elevation from the Jakkur Main Road approach with the clubhouse lit at the centre: Night elevation from the Jakkur Main Road approach — HM @ Yelahanka

Reading the renders - what each image actually shows

These visuals are artist's impressions based on HM @ Yelahanka's design intent at the EOI / pre-launch stage, not photographic captures of an existing building. The useful frame is to read each image as evidence of the architectural language - boutique, low-rise, and private - and of the low-density master plan: a garden community with buildings set into it rather than towers with leftover landscape around the base. Below, each of the six representative frames is annotated with the substantive details a serious buyer should look for.

Boutique low-rise facade from Jakkur Main Road: The headline frame is the project facade seen from the Jakkur Main Road approach. Because HM @ Yelahanka is built as Basement + Ground + 4, the elevation reads horizontally rather than vertically - a low-rise mass set into landscape rather than a tower against the sky. The facade is articulated to express the two-per-floor logic: generous window openings and balcony recesses mark the individual homes, and the four-floor height keeps the whole composition at a human, residential scale. The arrival sequence is framed by the gated entry on Jakkur Main Road, with landscape planting at the boundary softening the transition from the road to the community. This is the frame that establishes HM @ Yelahanka's core identity - boutique, low-rise, and private - against a corridor where most new launches are high-rise.

Central landscaped courtyard: This frame captures the central courtyard at the core of the community - the daily-hangout space for residents. Planted with shade and ornamental species, with seating and lawn, the courtyard is framed by the low-rise blocks, which sit at a height that keeps the space sunlit and human-scaled rather than overshadowed by towers. The courtyard frame shows the practical advantage of the low-density layout: because the blocks are only four floors high and well-spaced, the open space at the ground plane is generous, green, and central to the living experience. Residents walk through this landscape to reach the clubhouse, the pool, and their homes.

Boutique clubhouse and pool deck: The clubhouse frame captures the social heart of HM @ Yelahanka - the boutique clubhouse and its amenity deck, with the swimming pool adjacent, positioned centrally within the community. The clubhouse is scaled to a 95-home community: a single, well-finished social hub housing the gymnasium and fitness studio, the indoor games room, the reading lounge, the multipurpose hall, and the yoga and meditation deck, rather than a sprawling township amenity block. The render shows the clubhouse opening onto the landscaped courtyard and the pool, with the low-rise residential blocks framing the space beyond. The design language is residential and warm rather than grand - in keeping with a boutique community where the amenities are part of daily life and sized to be available rather than crowded.

Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living-dining interior: The interior frame shows a sample 3 BHK living-dining space, finished to a premium standard with vitrified flooring, a generous living-dining bay, and a balcony opening that brings in daylight and a green outlook over the courtyard. The sample fit-out shows a seating cluster at one end, a dining setting at the other, and a media wall on the inner partition - the kind of multi-zone arrangement that the spacious 3 BHK plans support. The frame illustrates the quality of the Vaastu-compliant plan: the room is well-proportioned, and the daylight reaches deep into the space because the two-per-floor layout allows windows on more sides. This is the interior experience the boutique format is designed to deliver.

Landscaped arrival court at the gated entry: This frame captures the arrival court at the gated entry. A single, controlled entry point opens onto a landscaped court, with the covered-parking access and the pedestrian route into the community both visible. The arrival sequence is designed to feel like entering a private garden address rather than a township gate - low planting, a clear pedestrian path, and the low-rise blocks visible beyond. The single-gate layout is a deliberate part of the boutique experience: one entry, one security point, and a calm, controlled threshold into a small community of 95 homes.

Night elevation from the Jakkur Main Road approach: The night frame captures the community from the Jakkur Main Road approach after dark, with warm interior lighting in the homes, the clubhouse glowing at the centre, and the landscape lit by bollard and accent lighting. The low-rise silhouette is softened by the perimeter planting, and the whole composition reads as a calm, residential address rather than a brightly-lit township. This frame conveys what evening arrival at HM @ Yelahanka will feel like once complete - a private, garden-set, low-rise community, quietly lit, on the Yelahanka-Jakkur corridor.

What buyers should still verify on a site visit

Even the most rigorously produced renders are abstractions. For a pre-launch project, the site visit is where the abstractions either survive contact with reality or quietly collapse. Practical items to verify in person:

  • The boutique scale and the two-per-floor format: stand in the cluster and confirm the low-rise height, the spacing between blocks, and the private-landing layout that the two-per-floor format delivers - the core of what the boutique proposition promises.
  • The Jakkur Main Road approach: drive in during a typical weekday morning to assess the traffic profile on Bellary Road and the actual time penalty to the airport, Manyata, and the Hebbal office belt. The metro is future relief; verify the present-day commute.
  • Site levels and natural drainage: walk the perimeter to check the natural slope of the land and the drainage exits. Karnataka monsoon performance is shaped less by the storm-water design and more by the original site topography.
  • Floor, block, and orientation: because each floor has only two homes, both units can have good Vaastu orientation - confirm the available units, floors, and outlooks before committing, since the better positions are selected first in a 95-home community.
  • Configurations and unit sizes: validate the 2 BHK (~1,087-1,250 sq ft) and 3 BHK (~1,450-1,818 sq ft) layouts against the floor plates - room proportions and balcony depth read differently in person than on paper.
  • Amenity scale against the home count: a community of 95 homes should support a curated, available-not-crowded amenity core - clubhouse, pool, gym, courtyard, walking path. Confirm the programmed scale.
  • Developer execution at HM North City: HM's completed Yelahanka project stands as the credibility signal for the build ahead. Direct observation of construction tolerances, common-area finish, and society-management standards at an aged HM project in the same belt is the most reliable signal of execution capability.

The HM sales team typically arranges site visits within a working day of an enquiry. Given the boutique scale - 95 homes - and the first-10-bookings offer, an early site visit is advisable for buyers who want priority unit selection. Use the gallery as a starting hypothesis to be tested at the plot, not a closing argument.

HM @ Yelahanka gallery FAQ

Are the HM @ Yelahanka images photographs or renders?

All visuals on this page are artist's impressions based on HM @ Yelahanka's design intent at the EOI / pre-launch stage, not photographs of a built building. As is standard for pre-launch marketing, the renders are indicative and the final as-built finishes, fixtures, and landscaping are subject to design refinement and will be confirmed in the official brochure and the sale agreement. Read each frame as evidence of the architectural language and the low-density master plan.

What does the facade frame show?

The headline frame is the project facade seen from the Jakkur Main Road approach. Because HM @ Yelahanka is built as Basement + Ground + 4, the elevation reads horizontally rather than vertically - a low-rise mass set into landscape rather than a tower against the sky, with window openings and balcony recesses marking the two-per-floor logic. It establishes the project's boutique, low-rise, private identity against a corridor where most new launches are high-rise.

What do the courtyard and clubhouse frames show?

The courtyard frame captures the central landscaped courtyard at the core of the community - planted with shade and ornamental species, framed by the low-rise blocks that keep it sunlit rather than overshadowed. The clubhouse frame shows the boutique clubhouse and pool deck at the centre, scaled to a 95-home community as a single well-finished social hub rather than a sprawling township amenity block.

Can I see a sample home at HM @ Yelahanka?

As an EOI / pre-launch project, the show unit is typically opened closer to launch. The interior renders show a sample Vaastu-compliant 3 BHK living-dining illustrating the plan and the standard. Two options carry the most information: a visit to HM North City, HM's completed Yelahanka project, which shows an aged HM development in the same micro-market; and a site visit to HM @ Yelahanka, which the HM sales team coordinates.

What does the night elevation frame convey?

The night frame captures the community from the Jakkur Main Road approach after dark, with warm interior lighting in the homes, the clubhouse glowing at the centre, and the landscape lit by bollard and accent lighting. The low-rise silhouette is softened by the perimeter planting, conveying what evening arrival at HM @ Yelahanka will feel like - a private, garden-set, low-rise community, quietly lit.

Talk to the HM @ Yelahanka team

Request the full-resolution renders, the brochure, and an EOI-stage site-visit slot on Jakkur Main Road, Yelahanka.

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