Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Lumina

Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu and Sattva Lumina sit at opposite corners of Bengaluru and chase opposite buyers. Casagrand Moondance is an 8.6-acre low-rise community of 504 two- and three-bedroom homes from Rs 75 Lakhs at a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate, tucked off Mysore Road in the south-west at Kumbalgodu. Sattva Lumina is a wide-configuration apartment project up north at Rajanukunte, Yelahanka, spanning compact 1 BHK homes through to large 3.5 and 4 BHK formats, from around Rs 80 Lakhs. This guide compares the two on location, configuration, price, built form, amenities and developer track record so you can see which one actually matches your stage of life and your map of the city.

SW vs NorthCity Quadrant
2 & 3 BHK vs 1-4 BHKConfig Spread
Rs 75L vs Rs 80LEntry Ticket
Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu compared with Sattva Lumina

At a glance: Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Lumina

FactorCasagrand MoondanceSattva Lumina
LocalityKumbalgodu, off Mysore RoadRajanukunte, Yelahanka (North)
Land area8.6 acresNot publicly stated
Units504 apartmentsNot publicly stated
Built formLow-rise B+G+4Not publicly stated
Configurations2 & 3 BHK1, 2, 2.5, 3, 3.5 & 4 BHK
Sizes1,171 - 1,866 sqft680 - 2,975 sqft
Entry priceFrom Rs 75 LakhsFrom ~Rs 80 Lakhs
Base rateRs 5,399/sqft (offer)Not publicly stated
DeveloperCasagrandSattva Group
RERAPRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667PRM/KA/RERA/1251/472/PR/060924/007009

Location and connectivity: south-west Mysore Road vs Yelahanka North

Geography is the first and biggest fork between these two. Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu sits off Mysore Road in the south-western quadrant, near the NICE Road interchange at Kumbalgodu. Its connectivity case rests on three pillars: NICE Ring Road, which puts Electronic City within roughly 35-40 minutes in off-peak traffic; the established Mysore Road arterial that links straight into the city's western belt; and the Namma Metro Purple Line extension progressing along the corridor. It is a corridor built for buyers who work in the southern and western tech and manufacturing belts and who want to stay clear of the city core. The wider Mysore Road belt has also matured steadily on social infrastructure - schools, hospitals and retail along the arterial - so a Kumbalgodu resident is not buying into raw, unserviced periphery so much as the outer edge of an established growth line.

Sattva Lumina sits in a completely different part of the map, at Rajanukunte in Yelahanka, North Bengaluru. North Bengaluru's pull is well documented: it is the side of the city anchored by Kempegowda International Airport, the aerospace and hardware parks along the airport corridor, and a steady pipeline of road and metro upgrades feeding that growth. Rajanukunte is on the outer edge of Yelahanka, so a buyer there is trading proximity-to-everything-today for a position on a long-term growth axis. The two addresses simply do not compete for the same person. If your work, family and routine live in the south-west, Casagrand Moondance is the natural base; if your world revolves around the airport, north-city offices or the Yelahanka belt, Sattva Lumina is the one that shortens your commute. The crossing-town penalty in Bengaluru is severe enough that very few buyers would realistically weigh a south-western Kumbalgodu home against a northern Rajanukunte one on commute grounds alone - the choice usually resolves itself the moment you map your daily routes. To check the north-city distances on the Sattva side - the airport corridor, Yelahanka and the Rajanukunte approach - verify them at source on Sattva Lumina's location page.

Configurations and sizing: a tight 2/3 BHK product vs a wide config menu

This is where the two projects reveal their philosophies most clearly. Casagrand Moondance runs a deliberately narrow menu: only 2 BHK (1,171-1,470 sqft) and 3 BHK (1,641-1,866 sqft). There is no 1 BHK and nothing above a 3 BHK. That focus is a feature, not a gap - it lets the developer plan every floor plate, courtyard and amenity around one clear resident profile: first-time buyers and growing families who want a right-sized, well-laid-out home rather than the largest box in the building.

Sattva Lumina goes the other way and casts a very wide net. Its inventory spans 1 BHK (from around 680 sqft), 2 BHK (about 1,142-1,352 sqft), a 2.5 BHK format (around 1,699 sqft), 3 BHK (roughly 1,506-2,003 sqft), a 3.5 BHK (about 2,412 sqft) and a 4 BHK (around 2,975 sqft). That ladder means a young single buyer, a couple, a growing family and a large household could all find a home under one RERA registration. The trade-off is the mirror image of Casagrand's: breadth brings choice and a mixed resident base, while focus brings consistency and a community of similar households. There is also a resale dimension worth naming: a tight 2/3 BHK building tends to attract a homogeneous, owner-occupier resident mix, which many families read as a quieter, more predictable community; a wide-config building draws a more varied mix of singles, couples, families and investors, which can mean more rental churn but also a broader pool of future buyers across price points. Neither is automatically better - it depends on whether you prioritise community consistency or exit flexibility. If your need is squarely a 1,200-1,650 sqft two- or three-bedroom family home, Casagrand is engineered for exactly that; if you want flexibility - or specifically a sub-700 sqft starter or a 2,400-2,975 sqft large-format unit - Sattva Lumina's range covers ground Casagrand deliberately leaves out. To see how that wide config ladder actually lays out on plan, study Sattva Lumina's floor plans page and confirm the per-type sizes at source.

Pricing: a published offer rate vs a wider, less-fixed band

On entry ticket the two are closer than their other differences suggest, but the transparency of the numbers differs. Casagrand Moondance opens at Rs 75 Lakhs for a 2 BHK at a Rs 5,399 per sqft offer rate, against a Casagrand list rate of Rs 5,599 and a comparable market rate of around Rs 7,499. Those figures are published and dated, which makes budgeting straightforward - you can run the all-inclusive maths on a known per-square-foot rate.

Sattva Lumina's publicly available pricing starts from roughly Rs 80 Lakhs. Because its configuration ladder runs all the way from a sub-700 sqft 1 BHK to a near-3,000 sqft 4 BHK, the total ticket spreads across a far wider band than Casagrand's tighter 2/3 BHK range, and a fixed per-square-foot base rate is not publicly stated for it. In practice that means a Sattva Lumina 1 BHK and a Sattva Lumina 4 BHK are very different financial decisions, while almost every Casagrand Moondance home lands in a predictable Rs 75 Lakh to roughly Rs 1.3 Crore corridor. Whichever you lean toward, the rule is the same: ask for a dated, all-inclusive cost sheet - covering floor-rise, preferred-location, parking, GST and registration - because the headline number rarely tells the full story. One extra caution applies specifically to a wide-config project like Sattva Lumina: a quoted entry price almost always refers to the smallest, lowest-floor 1 BHK, so do not assume that figure carries across to the 2 or 3 BHK you actually want - get the per-unit-type rate, not just the headline. With Casagrand's narrower range, the published Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate applies far more uniformly across the inventory, which is part of what makes its budgeting cleaner. For the Sattva side of that maths, check the current quotes and offers on Sattva Lumina's pricing page and ask for a dated per-unit-type rate.

Built form and density: a defined low-rise vs an undisclosed format

Casagrand Moondance is unambiguous about its form. It is a low-rise community - basement-plus-ground-plus-four-floor wings spread across 8.6 acres, with 504 homes working out to roughly 59 units per acre. Around 4.5 acres, just over half the site, is kept as open space organised around three central courtyards. The lived result is horizontal and garden-led: no tall towers casting shadows, no dependence on lifts for everyday movement, and ground that children can step straight out onto. For buyers who actively dislike high-rise living, that format is the whole appeal.

Sattva Lumina does not publish its land area, total unit count or built form in the material reviewed for this guide, so an honest comparison stops short of claiming a tower count or a density figure for it. What can be said is structural: a project offering everything from a 680 sqft 1 BHK to a 2,975 sqft 4 BHK almost always relies on a vertical, multi-typology layout to stack so many unit sizes efficiently, which is a different living experience from Casagrand's deliberately spread-out low-rise. Rather than guess at Sattva Lumina's specifics, the right move for a serious buyer is to confirm its tower height, floor count, open-space ratio and density directly from its sanctioned plan and RERA filing. It is worth being honest about why this matters: built form drives the things buyers actually feel day to day - lift waiting times, distance from the parking to the front door, how much sky and greenery a flat looks onto, and whether a power cut means climbing stairs. Casagrand's B+G+4 answer to all of those is known and verifiable; for Sattva Lumina, those answers should come from the sanctioned plan rather than from this comparison. For the Sattva site layout, tower positions and open-space arrangement, study Sattva Lumina's master plan page and cross-check it against the sanctioned plan.

Amenities and lifestyle: a documented 69+ set vs a project to verify on site

Casagrand Moondance leads clearly on documented amenity depth. The community carries over 69 amenities, anchored by a 20,300 sqft clubhouse and a 7,800 sqft swimming pool, with an unusually broad spread of kids', sports, indoor and outdoor facilities - from skating and cricket practice nets to indoor co-working, a creche and a learning centre. Because the layout is low-rise, most of this sits at or near ground level and is easy to reach on foot, which suits the family-first profile the project is built around. On the other side, review what Sattva publishes on Sattva Lumina's amenities page and ask for the sanctioned schedule and clubhouse area before weighing the two line-for-line.

Sattva Lumina's publicly listed amenities in the reviewed material are limited to core facilities such as a gym and a swimming pool, without a full published count or a detailed clubhouse specification. That is not evidence of a thin offering - large Sattva projects typically carry extensive clubhouses and landscaped amenity decks - but it does mean a buyer cannot yet compare it line-for-line against Casagrand's documented 69-plus set. The practical guidance is to treat Casagrand's amenity list as confirmed and to ask Sattva Lumina's sales team for the sanctioned amenity schedule and clubhouse area before weighing the two. As a rule of thumb, Casagrand competes on a wide, family-oriented amenity grid spread over real open land, while Sattva's strength historically lies in well-finished, design-led common areas; confirm the specifics for Lumina rather than assuming either way.

Developer track record: Casagrand vs Sattva Group

Both names carry weight, but in different lanes. Casagrand is a Chennai-headquartered developer with over two decades of delivery across Chennai, Bengaluru, Coimbatore and Hyderabad. Its reputation is built on consistent mid-market specifications, on-time handovers and an in-house post-possession service team. For a Kumbalgodu buyer the relevant read is that Casagrand is well past its proving-ground phase and runs a rehearsed operational playbook for 500-unit communities, which lowers execution risk on a project of this scale.

Sattva Group (formerly Salarpuria Sattva), founded in 1993 and headquartered in Bengaluru, is one of the city's largest and most established developers, with a deep portfolio across residential, commercial and IT-park real estate and a particularly strong reputation in the premium and Grade-A office segments. On its home turf of North and central Bengaluru, the brand carries genuine pull. The distinction between the two is positioning rather than reliability: Casagrand's equity is strongest in dependable mid-market residential delivery, while Sattva's is strongest in large-scale, premium and commercial-grade development. Whichever you favour, verify the live RERA filing - PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 for Casagrand Moondance and PRM/KA/RERA/1251/472/PR/060924/007009 for Sattva Lumina - and visit a completed project by each developer before booking. For the sister developer's record, see Sattva Lumina's about-the-developer page and verify the Sattva Group track record at source.

Who should pick which

Choose Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu if your life sits in south-western or southern Bengaluru, your budget is in the Rs 75 Lakh to roughly Rs 1.3 Crore band, and you want a 2 or 3 BHK family home in a low-rise, garden-led community with published pricing and a documented amenity set. It is the better-defined product on paper - land area, density, built form, open space, clubhouse and pool sizes are all on record - which makes it the easier project to budget and shortlist with confidence. It suits first-time buyers and young families who plan to live in the home rather than trade it.

Choose Sattva Lumina if your world is anchored in North Bengaluru - the airport corridor, Yelahanka or the aerospace and hardware belt - and you value a wide configuration ladder that runs from a compact 1 BHK to a large 4 BHK under one project. Its breadth is its main draw: it can house a single professional, a couple and a large family in the same community, and it carries the Sattva brand on the developer's home turf. The caveat is simply information - confirm its land area, built form, density, full amenity schedule and a dated all-inclusive cost sheet directly from the developer, since those are not publicly stated in the material reviewed here.

A clean way to decide is to start with the map, not the brochure. If your commute and family base point south-west, Casagrand Moondance is the realistic everyday-living choice; if they point north, Sattva Lumina shortens your day. Only after the location passes that test should you weigh configuration, price and amenities. The two share neither a quadrant nor a typical buyer, so most genuine shortlists will carry one of them, not both.

The honest summary: Casagrand Moondance offers a focused, fully-documented south-western product, while Sattva Lumina offers northern brand breadth and a wider config menu with more to verify. If you are weighing Casagrand Moondance against comparable mid-segment options, talk to our team for a side-by-side on real numbers - and if Sattva Lumina is your benchmark, confirm its open figures on its own pages before you treat any comparison as final.

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Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Lumina - Frequently Asked Questions

Are Casagrand Moondance and Sattva Lumina in the same part of Bengaluru?

No. Casagrand Moondance is in south-western Bengaluru, off Mysore Road at Kumbalgodu near the NICE Road interchange. Sattva Lumina is in North Bengaluru, at Rajanukunte in Yelahanka. They are on opposite sides of the city and serve different commute patterns.

Which has a wider choice of unit types?

Sattva Lumina. It offers a wide ladder from 1 BHK (around 680 sqft) up to 4 BHK (around 2,975 sqft), including 2.5 and 3.5 BHK formats. Casagrand Moondance deliberately keeps a tighter menu of only 2 BHK (1,171-1,470 sqft) and 3 BHK (1,641-1,866 sqft).

Which is cheaper to get into?

The entry tickets are close. Casagrand Moondance starts from about Rs 75 Lakhs at a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate, and Sattva Lumina's publicly available pricing starts from roughly Rs 80 Lakhs. Casagrand publishes a fixed per-sqft rate, while Sattva Lumina's total ticket spans a wider band across its larger config range.

How do the built form and density compare?

Casagrand Moondance is a low-rise B+G+4 community across 8.6 acres with 504 homes - about 59 units per acre and 4.5 acres of open space. Sattva Lumina does not publicly state its land area, unit count or built form, so confirm those from its sanctioned plan and RERA filing before comparing.

Are both projects RERA registered?

Yes. Casagrand Moondance is registered under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 and Sattva Lumina under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/472/PR/060924/007009. Verify the current status of both on rera.karnataka.gov.in before booking.

How do the developers compare?

Casagrand is a Chennai-headquartered developer with over two decades of mid-market, on-time residential delivery across South India. Sattva Group, founded in 1993 and based in Bengaluru, is one of the city's largest developers, strongest in premium and commercial-grade projects. Both are credible; the difference is positioning, not reliability.