Gallery

CKPC Heart of Harmony Gallery & Visual Walkthrough

This gallery is a guided visual walkthrough of CKPC Heart of Harmony at Kudlu Gate — from the tower in its skyline context to the clubhouse, the sky gardens and the interiors of the 3 and 4 BHK residences. 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.

Visual Walkthrough

CKPC Heart of Harmony Gallery

The Visual Story

What the Imagery Captures

From above, Heart of Harmony reads as a single sculpted tower set within a generous green base — the visual expression of the project's 84% open-space master plan, with the elevated Namma Metro Yellow Line sweeping past barely 400 metres away. The facade is rendered in a warm terracotta-and-bronze palette, articulated rather than flat, its 24 floors broken up by the recurring open-to-sky garden decks that step through the elevation every three floors.

The arrival experience is set by a double-height entrance lobby — a hospitality-grade space with full-height glazing and layered lighting. The terrace is the crown of the project, with the rooftop clubhouse opening onto a swimming pool complex framed by open sky and the city below. Interior frames show living and dining spaces oriented to the open city view, with floor-to-ceiling windows that exploit the higher floor-to-floor heights, while the wellness suite — spa, sauna, steam and ice bath — is documented in a calm material palette of stone and timber.

As a new-launch project with possession targeted for March 2030, the on-site imagery will evolve from launch renders toward live construction and the finished tower. View the physical site and sample finishes at the on-site Experience Centre at Kudlu Gate, and track verified milestones on the K-RERA portal. For the configurations behind these interiors, see the floor-plans page.

The Design Intent

CKPC Heart of Harmony — A Tower Composed Rather Than Stacked

The first thing the imagery teaches a visitor is that Heart of Harmony has been composed, not stacked. Where a conventional Bengaluru high-rise reads as a vertical repetition of a single plate, this tower has been sculpted — broken at deliberate intervals by the planted sky-garden decks, modulated by the sunlit corridor screens, and anchored at the base by a double-height lobby that announces the building's hospitality-grade arrival sequence. The visual rhythm is intentional: the eye travels up the elevation in three-storey movements, finding a green pause every third floor before the next bay of glazing.

Aerial frames give that intent its clearest reading. From above, the slender footprint of the tower sits inside a wide green base, and the surrounding landscape is shown unbroken by parked cars or service roads. This is the visual evidence of the 84% open-space promise — not a number on a brochure but a photograph in which the ground reads as garden rather than driveway. The elevated Yellow Line viaduct enters the frame a short walk from the gate, which makes the connectivity argument tangibly visual.

Ground-level frames return the eye to texture: the warm terracotta-and-bronze palette of the cladding, the stone and timber of the lobby, the layered hospitality lighting and the considered material transitions between exterior and interior. Together the aerial and ground views establish the project's editorial tone before the camera ever steps into a residence: this is a tower designed to be looked at as well as lived in, and the visual programme has been curated to match.

Heritage Inspiration

CKPC Heart of Harmony — A Cultural Sensibility in a Contemporary High-Rise

Heart of Harmony's visual identity is contemporary, but the cultural sensibility underneath is unmistakably rooted. The terracotta-and-bronze palette borrows from the warm earth tones of South Indian temple architecture and the patinated metal of heritage craft, translated into the language of a modern facade. The sky gardens, recurring every three floors, take the courtyard idea that anchors the traditional South Indian home and lifts it vertically through a high-rise — an editorial reinterpretation of the inner-court tradition for the apartment age.

The hospitality-grade lobby continues this thread. Its stone floors and timber detailing draw on the material vocabulary of a refined heritage interior, while the double-height volume and full-height glazing keep the room emphatically of its century. The sunlit corridor screens, photographed with light filtering through their geometry, evoke the jaali screens that have softened light in Indian buildings for centuries, here detailed in a clean contemporary metal. The result is an interior that feels considered and culturally grounded rather than imported.

This editorial-heritage layer is what separates Heart of Harmony from the corridor's volume product. A buyer can read the imagery and see a building that has thought about where it stands and the visual lineage it belongs to — a confident, refined response to South Bengaluru's particular cultural geography rather than a generic glass tower that could be set down anywhere.

Interior Space Planning

CKPC Heart of Harmony — How the Imagery Reads the Floor Plans

The interior frames are composed to communicate proportion as much as palette. The living and dining rooms are photographed across their longer axis, with floor-to-ceiling glazing on one face and the open city view as the backdrop — a composition that uses the higher floor-to-floor height to expand the apparent volume of the room. With zero common walls, the corner and through-units enjoy light from multiple faces, and the photography stages furniture lightly so the eye reads the volume rather than the styling.

Bedroom imagery emphasises quiet and scale, with the master suites shown en-suite and the proportions kept generous. The kitchens are documented as modular-ready, with the separate utility room visible behind — a small but practical detail that families recognise as the difference between a kitchen for show and a kitchen for daily use. The bathrooms are photographed with the branded sanitaryware and CP fittings the project's specification calls for, and the door-and-window systems are shown tuned to the building's higher ceiling height so the rooms feel taller and lighter than the square footage alone would suggest.

Across the interior set, the consistent editorial choice is restraint. Walls and surfaces are kept neutral, lighting is layered rather than dramatic, and accessories are minimal. The intent is to show the home a buyer would actually move into and personalise, rather than a styled set that bears no resemblance to lived-in reality. For the configurations and exact areas behind these frames, the floor-plans page gives the corresponding dimensions and per-unit breakdown.

Podium & Common Areas

CKPC Heart of Harmony — The Frames Beyond the Front Door

A premium tower is more than its apartments, and the gallery devotes a generous sequence to the spaces a resident uses outside the home. The vehicle-free podium is photographed as the working park it is meant to be — the nature trail and reflexology path winding through planting, the seating plazas and campfire seating staged for use, the amphitheatre opened up for an evening gathering. Because no cars share the surface, the frames read as a continuous green environment rather than a residual margin between blocks.

Active outdoor spaces get their own visual chapter. The basketball practice court, outdoor gym, cycle and jogging track, the tot lot and play courts, and the rock-climbing wall are each documented in use, which signals to a buyer that these are working amenities rather than render-only items. The frames also capture how the sight-lines work between the play areas and the seating plazas — the practical answer to the question of whether a parent can supervise a child from a comfortable bench.

The terrace gallery returns the eye to the project's most aspirational image: residents swimming and unwinding above the city, with the metro line and the corridor visible in the distance. Wellness frames document the spa, sauna, steam room and ice bath in a calm low-lit material palette of stone and timber, photographed alongside the gym and the pickleball court so the rooftop reads as a complete recovery-and-fitness destination. Together the podium and terrace sequences give the gallery its rhythm: ground-level community, mid-tower planted pauses, and an elevated wellness crown.

Clubhouse interior at CKPC Heart of Harmony

Request the full image set, the cinematic tour and the latest renders.

Want to see more?

Enquire Now View Amenities
Frequently Asked Questions

CKPC Heart of Harmony Gallery - Frequently Asked Questions

The gallery is a guided visual walkthrough from the tower in its skyline context to the double-height entrance lobby, the rooftop clubhouse and pool, the sky gardens, the landscaped podium and the interiors of the 3 and 4 BHK residences.

As a new-launch project with possession targeted for March 2030, the imagery comprises launch renders and show-experience visuals. Buyers can view the physical site, sample finishes and the experience environment at the on-site Experience Centre at Kudlu Gate.

Yes. The wider context shots show the elevated Namma Metro Yellow Line sweeping past the tower roughly 400 metres away, with a train in motion, making the project's central locational promise visual.

Submit an enquiry through the contact page and the CKPC sales team will share the complete digital asset hub, including the cinematic project tour, the 360-degree drone view and the latest renders.

Verified construction milestones can be tracked through the quarterly progress filings on the K-RERA portal, and the on-site Experience Centre at Kudlu Gate shows the physical site and sample finishes.