The Camellias by DLF in Gurugram. Each apartment here will stretch across an entire floor. The bare shell will cost upwards of Rs 250 million. Photo: Sanjay K Sharma
Far away in Bengaluru, Quintessentially, the concierge and lifestyle management service that has offices across 63 countries, is at work at the Embassy Boulevard, too. Its tasks include arranging last-minute reservations at a Michelin-starred restaurant or getting a resident a Shih Tzu toy dog. Embassy Boulevard, a 51-acre, über-luxury gated project with 170 villas (costing Rs 85 million to Rs 180 million), is located about 12 km from Bengaluru airport amidst tree-lined avenues and landscaped gardens. Being a resident here automatically grants you access to such prospects as membership to the BLVD Club, which has the usual spa-like amenities and 15-odd guestrooms, the Embassy International Riding School (which also has ponies for children) and an international school.
In the heart of the city is the 33-storey Kingfisher Towers in Bengaluru’s central business district. Here, the first thing that strikes you is the stunning view of the city from the living room: the rich green canopy in Bengaluru’s beloved Cubbon Park, the palace-like Vidhana Soudha (the city’s seat for legislature) and the brick-red Bangalore High Court. Built on what was once fugitive tycoon Vijay Mallya’s 4.1-acre ancestral home, the property has 8,000 sq ft apartments, each with three-four bedrooms, multiple study rooms and a personal yoga/gym studio. The complex, which is connected to the tony UB City, also has two swimming pools, a restaurant, a helipad, badminton and squash courts, pool and billiard rooms, a banquet hall and five car parks. (The penthouse on the 33rd floor, known as the White House, has its own private entrance and belongs to Mallya.) This April, two apartments here sold for Rs 350 million each.
Ironically, when you’re selling an apartment that costs north of Rs 300 million, it’s not just about money anymore. More so, if there are fewer than 40 such units available for sale, like at the Four Seasons Private Residences by Provenance Land in Worli, Mumbai. The tower, which has a total of 50,000 sq ft of saleable area, has just one apartment on each floor — 38 apartments in all, of which half are sold. With interiors inspired by India’s jewels and precious stones, this complex is primed to be ready end-2020.
Head over to Chennai and there is the Buckingham Gardens, developed by Raj Waterscape, on Chennai’s East Coast Road, just off the Old Mahabalipuram Road. This has 17 villas (priced Rs 105 million to Rs 115 million) spread over 10 acres, with the Buckingham Canal on one side and a vast stretch of forest on the other. It boasts of windmill-generated power, luxury boats exclusively for the residents, boat parking yard, two flood-lit tennis courts, indoor and outdoor party halls, café, spa, central sewage treatment plant, electrified fence along the property’s boundary and home automation solutions. The target is the entire spectrum of high net worth individuals (HNIs): CEOs, business personalities, the start-up community, non-resident Indians (NRIs) and IT professionals.
How the developer reaches out to and woos these exclusive buyers is an art in itself. A couple of times every month, Ankit Shukla, the cluster head of luxury projects for the Prestige Group, which is developing Kingfisher Towers, can be found in the luxury hotel, Conrad Bengaluru, talking to potential buyers over coffee or a drink. “We talk about the economy, about manufacturing issues if the potential buyer is from, say, the leather industry, or about government regulations, but we never talk about the property or its budgeting,” says Shukla. The whole idea is to engage — and gauge — the potential customer to see if he fits into a community of like-minded people.
While identifying potential buyers for Brigade Caladium (Rs 50 million) in Bengaluru, the team at Brigade Enterprises also chose to complexly avoid mainstream advertising channels. “One way we reached out to HNIs was to connect with them at some of Bengaluru’s elite clubs,” says Viswa Prathap Desu, senior vice-president, sales and marketing, Brigade Enterprises. These clubs include the Bangalore Club and the Bangalore Golf Club. “We also connect with wealth management bankers because their clients are often on a lookout for exclusive properties that are high on privacy,” says Desu.