Gravity Smera Gardens Master Plan
The Gravity Smera Gardens master plan turns 12 acres off Hosur Road into a low-density villa community where the forest is the framework and the homes are placed within it - 174 villas across 18 blocks and two phases, along tree-lined cobblestone streets. From a planning angle, Habulus Tranquil keeps the reference local: internal roads, open-space placement, amenity access, and tower orientation all affect how the address will live after handover.

A forest framework with the clubhouse at the heart
The defining choice in the plan is the allocation of land. Rather than maximising built footprint, Smera Gardens devotes the majority of its 12 acres to landscape, tree cover, walkways, water and shared amenity — with villa footprints kept compact so that greenery, not concrete, surrounds every home.
Villas are grouped into eighteen blocks oriented North, East or West, arranged along internal streets so that each home faces greenery and most face a private garden on at least one side. The largest homes (Block 10, 3,515 sq.ft.) anchor prime positions, while the efficient blocks offer the same garden-led living at an accessible footprint.
How the 12 acres are allocated
| Land use | Role in the plan |
|---|---|
| Villa plots (18 blocks) | Compact duplex footprints with private gardens |
| Private gardens | 400 sq.ft. backyard + 500 sq.ft. terrace per villa |
| Forest & landscape | 1,500+ native trees, Miyawaki entrance, green walkways |
| Amenity zones | Clubhouse, pool, courts, amphitheatre, cafe, decks |
| Water features | Pond ecosystem / Mystic Lagoon, recharge infrastructure |
| Internal roads | Cobblestone-paved circulation network |
| Parking | Covered parking per villa + visitor parking |
Circulation, landscape and the arrival sequence
Internal movement is organised around cobblestone-paved roads that are permeable, low-glare and visually softer than asphalt, connecting every block to the entrance, parking and the central amenity cluster while keeping vehicle speeds low. Beyond the roads, a dedicated network of green walkways — the Forest Whispers trail, the Elder's Wisdom Walk and the Tranquil Patch — lets residents move through the community on foot, surrounded by planting rather than traffic.
The amenity cluster concentrates shared recreation — the Sylvan Forest clubhouse, swimming pool and sports courts form the active core, with the amphitheatre, gathering lawn and SkyBrew cafe adjacent for community life, and reflective spaces like the Zen Sky meditation deck and Mystic Lagoon placed for calm.
How the phases mature together
Because the 1,500-tree planting and the Miyawaki entrance forest are established early, the landscape framework matures while the villas are still being completed — so Phase 1 residents move into an environment that already reads as green rather than raw. Phase 2 then extends the same template deeper into the site, benefiting from the established canopy and the operational amenity core.
This sequencing — forest first, homes within it, phase by phase — is central to Gravity's method and explains why its communities feel settled far sooner than conventional projects. Explore the floor plans for block-wise layouts, the amenities for the full programme, or contact the team to walk the model villa.
Gravity Smera Gardens garden design and green belt
The Gravity Smera Gardens master plan is organised, more than anything else, around two natural systems: the tree canopy and the water network. Over 1,500 native and diverse trees have been planted across the 12 acres in a deliberate sequence — tall canopy species for shade, mid-storey flowering species for colour and pollinators, and a dense native understorey that builds biodiversity from the ground up. The planting is distributed so no cluster of homes is far from shade and birdsong, and the internal streets read as wooded lanes rather than service corridors. The signature Miyawaki forest-themed entrance stretch applies a well-known restoration technique to the threshold, creating a true forest at the front gate within years rather than decades and screening the community from arterial noise the moment a car turns off the approach road.
The water system runs in parallel. The Mystic Lagoon pond stores and cycles water while supporting the canopy and cooling the microclimate; the permeable cobblestone road network infiltrates rainfall rather than running it off; and the groundwater recharge system directs the surplus back into the aquifer instead of flushing it into storm drains. Together, the tree canopy and the water network do the heavy lifting of placemaking, with the architecture deferring to the landscape rather than competing with it. For a buyer evaluating the master plan against rival villa communities, this is the clearest signal that Gravity Smera Gardens is a genuinely nature-led layout rather than a conventional plan with greenery added at the margins — the horticultural-luxe framework is structural, not stylistic, and it is the single feature most likely to define how the community will feel a decade from now when the canopy has fully matured and the planting has spread to fill every available edge of the site.
Gravity Smera Gardens infrastructure, sustainability and density
Below the cobblestone surface, the Gravity Smera Gardens master plan integrates a layer of essential but invisible infrastructure. The groundwater recharge network handles monsoon flows across the gently sloped site and returns rainwater to the aquifer, with capacity sized for the community's full occupancy and the wider neighbourhood water table. The stormwater and drainage layout is sized to manage peak events without overwhelming the landscape. Water, power and sewerage reticulation are routed beneath the streets with provision for the community's full occupancy, so the individual plot is given over to the home and its garden rather than to services. Visitor parking is woven into the layout, while covered car parking is provided per villa at the front of each plot. Internal circulation is deliberately narrow and cobblestone-paved to keep vehicle speeds low and pedestrian movement safe, with a parallel network of green walkways — Forest Whispers, Elder's Wisdom Walk and the Tranquil Patch — threading between the homes for foot traffic and shaded daily commutes.
The defining choice of the plan, however, is its low density. With 174 villas across 12 acres — and the majority of that land given to landscape, trees, water and amenity rather than built footprint — the community achieves a generosity of space that high-density gated projects cannot match. Compact villa footprints, consistent setbacks and trees planted between blocks mean neighbours are buffered by greenery rather than stacked against one another. Each home's private 400 sq.ft. backyard and 500 sq.ft. terrace garden extend that privacy vertically, so families enjoy outdoor space that is genuinely their own rather than overlooked. Sustainability is treated as a planning principle rather than a bolt-on: permeable cobblestone roads and extensive soft landscape maximise rainwater infiltration; the 1,500-plus tree canopy and Miyawaki forest sequester carbon and reduce ambient temperature; the recharge system and pond close the water loop; and the use of mud-block, Kota stone and FSC-certified timber in the villas lowers the embodied energy of the built fabric. Taken together, the layout, the landscape and the materials make Gravity Smera Gardens a measurably lighter footprint than a conventional villa development of the same size, and they translate the horticultural-luxe positioning into a master plan that reads convincingly both on paper and on the ground for a prospective buyer walking the site for the first time.

Walk the Gravity Smera Gardens master plan in person
Request the full master-plan visual and a guided site visit through the Entry Arch and the Miyawaki forest stretch.
Enquire Now →Gravity Smera Gardens Master Plan | 12-Acre Villa Layout - Frequently Asked Questions
Across 18 blocks and two phases, the master plan arranges 174 duplex 3 & 4 BHK villas along tree-lined cobblestone streets, anchored by a central amenity cluster and threaded with green pockets, water features and walkways. The majority of the 12 acres is devoted to landscape rather than built footprint.
A 40-foot-wide approach road connects the community to Hosur Main Road, leading to the Entry Arch and the signature Miyawaki forest-themed entrance stretch - a dense, fast-growing native forest the driveway curves through before the villas reveal themselves.
The community is laid out across Phase 1 and Phase 2, with the eighteen blocks distributed between them. Phase 1 establishes the entrance sequence, the primary amenity cluster and the first villa blocks; Phase 2 extends the community deeper into the site.
A groundwater recharge system returns rainwater to the aquifer, the Mystic Lagoon pond ecosystem supports biodiversity and microclimate cooling, a stormwater network manages monsoon flows, and utilities are routed beneath the cobblestone streets.
With 174 villas across 12 acres and the majority of land given to landscape, compact footprints and consistent setbacks mean neighbours are buffered by greenery. Each home's private 400 sq.ft. backyard and 500 sq.ft. terrace garden extend that privacy vertically.
Note the block and orientation (North, East or West), the proximity to the amenity cluster versus the quieter green edges, and the phase - Phase 1 homes deliver first and into a more mature landscape.