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Signature Regal - Gallery & Visual Tour

A visual tour of Signature Regal (Signature Electronic City): the low-density tower aerial, the residential facade and gated arrival, the clubhouse and pool, the landscaped gardens and tracks, and the ground-floor private backyards. Tap any image to view it larger.

Signature Regal gallery

Six representative project visuals across the towers, the amenity precinct, the landscaped open space, the apartment interiors, and the ground-floor backyards. Tap any image to open it larger.

What the gallery covers

The frames fall into five groups. The towers and skyline - led by the aerial - show the six towers spread across 8.5 acres with 30-to-40-foot spacing, the central landscaped precinct, and the open space the low density makes possible, plus the residential facade and the gated, landscaped arrival. The amenity and clubhouse precinct shows the clubhouse exterior and its double-height glazing, the lounge, co-working and library interior, and the swimming pool with its separate kids' pool. The landscaped open space shows the garden vignettes - zen, aroma and tropical greens - and the jogging and cycling track winding through them. The apartment interiors show the scale of the living-dining bay and the perimeter daylight the low-density floor plate allows. And the ground-floor backyard frames show the project's signature product: a private, owned outdoor space attached to the home.

How to read pre-launch visuals

Renders show intent, not as-built reality, so read them with discipline. The master-plan aerial is the most reliable frame in the set, because the structural decisions it expresses - the tower count, the spacing, the open-space ratio - are hard to reverse once construction starts. For the interiors, ask for the specification sheet alongside the gallery: the flooring, fittings, sanitaryware and electrical standard behind the renders is what determines the delivered finish. The backyard product should be cross-checked against the floor plans and the sale agreement, and the landscape and amenity zones against the master plan and the common-area apportionment.

Towers and skyline

The first group of frames is the towers and the skyline. The aerial render is the anchor: it shows the six towers spread across the 8.5-acre parcel with the 30-to-40-foot spacing between them, the central amenity precinct with the clubhouse and pools, and the green corridors that the 75%-plus open space makes possible. A tower-elevation close-up shows the facade and the wide balconies, and the slim central core that the six-units-per-floor plate allows - far less massing than the packed floor plates of a high-density project. The arrival sequence shows the gated entrance, the security point, and the landscaped approach driveway, while a dusk frame shows how the facade and balcony lighting reads after dark, when most residents are home from the corridor's offices.

Amenity, clubhouse and landscape

The second and third groups cover the amenity precinct and the landscaped open space. The clubhouse exterior shows its scale relative to the towers and its central position, walkable from all six towers without crossing a road; the interior shows the lounge, the co-working tables, and the library. The swimming pool frame shows the deck, the loungers, and the separate kids' pool, framed by landscape - and, because roughly 700 households share it rather than 1,300-plus, it reads as a calmer amenity than the same facility in a mega-project. The sports frames show the basketball, badminton, squash, mini-soccer and mini-golf courts distributed through the landscape rather than stacked on one deck. The garden vignettes show the distinct characters of the zen garden, the aroma garden, and the tropical greens, and the jogging and cycling track winding past them. The social and family frames show the party lawn, the amphitheatre seating, the picnic and barbecue areas, and the kids' play and water-play zones, with the evening landscape softly lit for post-work use.

Apartment interiors and the backyard product

The fourth and fifth groups bring the gallery indoors and to the ground floor. The living-dining frame shows the scale of the principal bay - a 2 BHK starts at roughly 1,280 sq ft and the 3 BHK runs up to 1,954 sq ft - and the depth that the larger plates allow, with the balcony beyond. The bedroom and kitchen frames show the perimeter daylight and cross-ventilation that the low-density floor plate makes possible, since more of each plate touches the building's perimeter. The balcony-outlook frame is worth studying for what it faces - greenery and sky rather than a neighbouring wall, which is exactly what the 30-to-40-foot tower spacing is designed to protect. And the ground-floor backyard frames show the project's signature product: a private, fenced, owned outdoor space attached to the home, shown both empty and in use - children playing, a pet, a small garden, outdoor dining - inside the gated security of the community.

The frames buyers ask for most

When buyers request specific images before a site visit, a consistent shortlist comes up: the aerial or master-plan render, because it shows the density decision that defines the project; the ground-floor backyard render, because it is the product nothing else in the micro-market offers; the living-dining bay, because it conveys the scale of the larger units; the clubhouse and pool, because they show the amenity precinct's relationship to the towers; the tower-facade close-up, because it shows the balcony depth and the slim core; and the garden and landscape vignettes, because they show how the open space is actually programmed. Asking for these specific frames, rather than a generic brochure, is the efficient way to evaluate the project visually before committing the time to a site visit.

Grounding the renders

The single most reliable way to ground a pre-launch render is to inspect a completed building by the same developer. Signature Splendor in Chandapura is occupied today, so a buyer can walk it, see how the common areas, lifts and lobbies have aged, and ask residents about the handover and post-possession service. That grounded inspection is a better gauge of the delivered product than any render. A site visit to Signature Regal then shows the location, the NH-844 road access, and the construction stage on the ground - the contact page is where to arrange both, and the master-plan page shows how the frames map onto the site. As a final discipline, cross-check every render against a document: the aerial against the RERA site plan and unit count, the interiors against the specification sheet, the backyard against the floor plan and sale agreement, and the landscape against the common-area apportionment - so the picture you buy on matches the project you contract for.

Used well, the gallery is a filter rather than a decision-maker. It should tell you quickly whether the project's design intent matches what you are looking for - the density, the format, the scale of the homes, the character of the open space - so you can decide whether it is worth a site visit. What it cannot do is confirm the delivered quality, the finish, or the timeline, all of which require the specification sheet, the RERA filing, and, ideally, a walk through the developer's completed Signature Splendor. Treat the renders as an accurate statement of intent from a developer that has delivered in this sub-market before, verify the intent against the documents, and let the site visit settle the rest.

Signature Regal gallery FAQ

Quick answers to the questions buyers most often ask about Signature Regal on this topic. As a pre-launch project, treat these as a starting reference: the project-level Karnataka RERA registration is the legally binding anchor for the carpet area, the specification, the completion timeline, and the payment schedule, and it is awaited - the promoter's PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/AG/170824/000174 number is an agent / entity registration, not a project registration. Verify the dedicated project-level number on the Karnataka RERA portal before any payment beyond a refundable EOI deposit.

What does the gallery cover?

Five categories of views: the towers and skyline (including the aerial), the amenity and clubhouse precinct, the landscaped open space, apartment interiors, and the ground-floor private-backyard product.

Are these photos or renders?

As a pre-launch project, the images are stylised renders that show design intent rather than photographs of an existing building. The master-plan aerial is the most reliable frame, because the structural decisions it shows are hard to reverse once built.

What should I cross-check the renders against?

Cross-check the aerial density claim against the RERA site plan and unit count, the interior finishes against the specification sheet, the backyard product against the floor plans and sale agreement, and the landscape zones against the master plan and common-area apportionment.

Which frames do buyers ask for most?

The aerial / master-plan render, the ground-floor backyard render, the living-dining bay, the clubhouse and pool, the tower facade close-up, and the garden and landscape vignettes.

How can I see the real product?

Visit the developer's completed Chandapura community, Signature Splendor, which is occupied today - it grounds the renders in a delivered building in the same sub-market. Then book a site visit to Signature Regal to see the location and construction stage.

Book a Signature Regal site visit

The renders show design intent; a site visit shows the location, the road access on NH-844, and the construction stage. Ask the team to arrange a slot, and to share the spec sheet alongside the gallery.

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