The Architecture Behind the Images
Brigade Belvedere is designed by Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura, the Barcelona studio founded by Ricardo Bofill, known internationally for redefining the relationship between mass housing and human scale. The firm's signature: buildings that feel monumental from a distance but intimate at the level of the resident.
At Budigere Cross, Bofill's brief was a "bungalow in the sky", an apartment that lives like a ground-floor home. The result is a tower typology where no two apartments share a wall along the primary living axis, every unit has direct access to a private outdoor court or terrace, and the massing steps back at upper levels to carve out sky gardens above the city.
What you see in the images, the layered facade, the deep courtyard recesses, the green planes at multiple levels, is not decorative. Each element is structural to how natural light, air movement, and visual privacy work inside the apartments.
What Life Here Looks Like
The images reflect a specific idea of urban living, one that Brigade Belvedere has been designed around.
Mornings in a Courtyard City
The landscaped courtyards at Brigade Belvedere are not incidental green buffers between towers. They are the organising spine of the site, wide, shaded, and accessible from every residential floor. The community garden at ground level transitions into elevated terraces at the upper podium levels, so residents on any floor have outdoor space within steps of their front door rather than a lift ride away.
A 24,000 Sq. Ft. Clubhouse as a Third Space
The clubhouse at Brigade Belvedere is sized to function as a genuine extension of home, not just a gym and a pool, but a 24,000 sq. ft. facility with a banquet hall, multipurpose courts, a co-working zone, a cafeteria, a theatre, and children's activity spaces. For residents working from home or with school-age children, this matters as much as the apartment size itself.
Sport and Outdoor Living at Scale
The tennis court visible in the gallery images is one of several outdoor sport and recreation spaces planned across the 10.75-acre site. The jogging track, outdoor fitness stations, and open lawn areas reflect Brigade Group's approach to designing at a density where residents do not feel the 1,750-unit scale on a daily basis, the open space ratio keeps common areas from feeling congested.
Green at Every Level
One of the consistent themes across the Brigade Belvedere images is vertical greenery, the project is designed so that landscaping is not confined to the ground floor but extends upward through the tower as sky gardens, terrace planters, and courtyard cutouts.
This reflects Ricardo Bofill's long-standing interest in the integration of built form and nature, what the studio calls "architecture as nature." At a practical level, it means residents on upper floors get meaningful planted outdoor space, not just a concrete balcony overlooking a distant view.
The elevated garden images in the gallery represent this clearly: the planting depth is substantial, the paving is articulated, and the seating is designed for use rather than as a set-dressing render. Whether these renders translate precisely into the delivered product depends on Brigade Group's construction execution, something to track as towers rise through 2027–2029.