Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Springs
Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu and Sattva Springs both belong to south Bengaluru's fast-growing south-western and southern fringe, yet they answer two very different questions. Casagrand Moondance is an 8.6-acre, 504-home low-rise apartment community of 2 and 3 BHK flats at Kumbalgodu, off Mysore Road, opening from Rs 75 Lakhs at a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate. Sattva Springs is a small, low-density gated enclave of large 4 BHK row villas on Kanakapura Road near the Art of Living campus, priced from about Rs 2 Crore. The core trade-off is straightforward: an affordable, amenity-rich apartment community with brand-backed scale versus a far more exclusive, far more expensive villa product with private terraces and ground-touch living. This guide compares the two on location, configuration, price, built form, amenities and developer track record.
At a glance: Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Springs
| Factor | Casagrand Moondance | Sattva Springs |
|---|---|---|
| Locality | Kumbalgodu, off Mysore Road | Kagalipura, Kanakapura Road |
| Land area | 8.6 acres | ~5.5-7 acres |
| Units | 504 apartments | ~70 row villas |
| Built form | Low-rise B+G+4 | Triplex villas (B+G+3) |
| Configurations | 2 & 3 BHK | 4 BHK villas (plus 2-3.5 BHK options) |
| Sizes | 1,171 - 1,866 sqft | 1,352 - 5,236 sqft |
| Entry price | From Rs 75 Lakhs | From about Rs 2 Crore |
| Base rate | Rs 5,399/sqft (offer) | Not published |
| Developer | Casagrand | Sattva Group |
| RERA | PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 | PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/240724/006948 |
Location and connectivity: two different southern corridors
The first thing to settle is that these projects do not sit on the same road. Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu is off Mysore Road (NH-275) in south-western Bengaluru, at Kumbalgodu near the NICE Road interchange. Its connectivity case rests on that NICE Ring Road link, which puts Electronic City within roughly 35-40 minutes in off-peak traffic, and on the Namma Metro Purple Line extension progressing along the Mysore Road corridor over time. It is an outer-belt address that trades a slightly longer commute for far more land and a far lower ticket.
Sattva Springs is on Kanakapura Road at Kagalipura, near the Art of Living campus, on the southern spine that runs out toward Bannerghatta and the greener edge of the city. Per the project's own material, the nearest metro station is roughly ten minutes away and NICE Road again provides fast access toward Electronic City, so both addresses ultimately tap the same southern employment belt from different directions. The Kanakapura corridor near the Art of Living is calmer and lower-density than the commercial stretch closer to the city, which suits a villa product. For a buyer choosing on location alone, it comes down to which corridor your work and family ties favour - Mysore Road and the western/Electronic City axis for Casagrand Moondance, or the Kanakapura Road southern green belt for Sattva Springs. If the Kagalipura corridor is your priority, confirm the metro and NICE Road distances against Sattva Springs' own location page.
Configurations and sizing: compact family flats vs large triplex villas
The configuration gap here is about product type, not just size. Casagrand Moondance offers stacked apartments in two formats: 2 BHK from 1,171 to 1,470 sqft and 3 BHK from 1,641 to 1,866 sqft. That deliberately narrow range - no 1 BHK below, nothing above a 3 BHK - signals a project tuned for first-time buyers and growing families who want a well-planned flat with shared community amenities.
Sattva Springs is built around the 4 BHK row villa, laid out as a basement plus ground plus upper floors with private parking below and a private terrace on top. The headline 4 BHK villas run from about 3,600 to 5,236 sqft, and the project also references smaller layouts - a 2 BHK around 1,352 sqft, a 3 BHK near 2,003 sqft and a 3.5 BHK close to 2,975 sqft - though the marquee product most buyers come for is the triplex villa. The practical contrast is stark: a Sattva Springs villa gives you vertical separation across your own floors, a private terrace and ground-touch entry that a stacked flat cannot offer, while Casagrand Moondance gives you an efficient, right-sized apartment at a fraction of the footprint and cost. If you want a 1,200-1,650 sqft family flat, Casagrand is built for you; if you want 3,600 sqft-plus of independent villa living, that is Sattva Springs' entire premise. Study the triplex villa and the smaller layouts against Sattva Springs' own floor plans to confirm the carpet and built-up split.
Pricing: what each rupee actually buys
Price is where the two projects separate most clearly, and where honesty matters. 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 around Rs 7,499 per sqft - so the entry offer is positioned below the prevailing micro-market band. That is the project's defining strength: a transparent, sub-Crore entry ticket into a branded community.
Sattva Springs is a different price tier. Its published material lists pricing from about Rs 2 Crore, but it does not publish a fixed per-square-foot base rate, so any precise rate or all-inclusive figure should be taken directly from the developer in writing rather than inferred. What is clear is the direction of travel: a large 4 BHK villa on a low-density Kanakapura Road parcel will carry a materially higher ticket and a higher effective rate than a mid-segment Mysore Road apartment, because you are buying land, exclusivity and private built form rather than a share of a 504-home community. The two are therefore rarely cross-shopped by the same wallet - a Rs 75 Lakh-1.3 Crore budget points to Casagrand Moondance, while a Rs 2 Crore-plus villa budget points to Sattva Springs. It is also worth remembering that a villa ticket buys land share as well as built-up area, which behaves differently on resale than apartment carpet does; an apartment buyer is largely buying the structure and the brand of the community, while a villa buyer is buying an appreciating land component too. Always ask each developer for a dated, all-inclusive cost sheet - including registration, GST and any infrastructure or maintenance deposits - before comparing, because the headline number rarely tells the whole story on either side. Since Sattva Springs does not publish a fixed per-square-foot rate, take its villa pricing directly from Sattva Springs' own pricing page in writing.
Built form and density: a low-rise apartment community vs a villa enclave
Casagrand Moondance is a low-rise apartment community: basement-plus-ground-plus-four-floor wings spread across 8.6 acres, with 504 homes working out to roughly 59 units per acre and about 4.5 acres - around 52% of the site - kept as open space around three central courtyards. The experience is communal and garden-dominated, with low buildings, no tall towers and short, walkable distances between homes and amenities.
Sattva Springs is the opposite end of the density scale. It is a small gated enclave of roughly seventy 4 BHK row villas on a low-density parcel the project describes as around 5.5 to 7 acres, with each villa configured as a triplex - basement for parking and utility, ground and upper living floors, and a private terrace. That works out to a fraction of the units per acre that an apartment community carries, which is precisely the point: you trade shared corridors and lifts for your own four walls, your own roof and far more privacy. Neither format is better in the abstract. Families who want an affordable home inside an active, amenity-led community lean to Casagrand Moondance; buyers who want the independence and permanence of an owned villa, and can fund it, lean to Sattva Springs. To see how the roughly seventy triplex villas are laid out across the low-density parcel, study Sattva Springs' own master plan.
Amenities and lifestyle: a deep shared menu vs villa privacy
Amenities follow directly from format. Casagrand Moondance leads on sheer breadth, with over 69 amenities anchored by a 20,300 sqft clubhouse and a 7,800 sqft swimming pool, plus an unusually deep spread of kids', sports, indoor and outdoor facilities - a skating rink, cricket practice nets, indoor co-working, a creche and a learning centre among them. Because the layout is low-rise and ground-heavy, most of this is reachable on foot, and the cost of running it is shared across 504 households, which keeps per-home maintenance reasonable for the size of the offer.
Sattva Springs takes the villa-enclave approach: a smaller community typically means a tighter, more curated common-amenity set, with the lifestyle weighted toward what each villa owns privately - a personal terrace, private parking and the space of an independent home - rather than a long catalogue of shared facilities. That is a genuine philosophical split. If your idea of community living is a clubhouse you use daily and children who walk out to a shared play court, Casagrand Moondance's breadth is hard to match at the price, and the running cost is diluted across hundreds of homes. If you would rather host on your own terrace and value privacy over a crowded amenity deck, the villa format answers that better, even if the shared facilities are fewer. There is also a maintenance dimension worth weighing: a large shared amenity base means a recurring monthly outflow you do not control, whereas a villa shifts more of the upkeep onto the individual owner. Neither is automatically cheaper to live in over a decade, so model both before you decide. For the curated villa-enclave common-area set, check Sattva Springs' own amenities page and confirm the final provision directly with its team.
Developer track record: Casagrand vs Sattva Group
Both names carry weight, but their reputations sit in different places. Casagrand is a Chennai-headquartered developer with over two decades of delivery across Chennai, Bengaluru, Coimbatore and Hyderabad, known for 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 large, 500-unit apartment communities at accessible price points.
Sattva Group, formerly Salarpuria Sattva, is one of Bengaluru's largest and most established developers, with a deep portfolio spanning residential, commercial and Grade-A IT-park real estate and a strong reputation in the premium segment. A boutique villa project like Sattva Springs leans on that brand equity and on the developer's experience delivering higher-end products. The distinction is positioning rather than reliability: Casagrand's strength is dependable, high-volume mid-market delivery, while Sattva's is large-scale premium and commercial-grade development now extended into an exclusive villa format. Whichever you favour, verify the live RERA filing - PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 for Casagrand Moondance and PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/240724/006948 for Sattva Springs - and visit a completed project by each before booking. For Sattva Group's own account of its portfolio and the villa project's positioning, read Sattva Springs' own builder page.
Who should pick which
Choose Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu if your budget sits in the Rs 75 Lakh-1.3 Crore band, you want a 2 or 3 BHK family apartment with genuine open space, a deep amenity menu and a low-rise format, and you are comfortable with a south-western Mysore Road address near NICE Road. It is the stronger value play and the better fit for first-time buyers and young families who want maximum home and community per rupee without stretching into villa territory.
Choose Sattva Springs if you are buying in the Rs 2 Crore-plus bracket, want the independence of a large 4 BHK row villa with a private terrace and your own parking, and prefer the calmer, lower-density Kanakapura Road belt near the Art of Living campus. Per the project's own material it targets handover from Q3 2027 onwards, so it also suits a buyer comfortable with a launch-stage timeline rather than a ready-to-move home; confirm the latest possession schedule directly before booking.
A clean way to decide is to fix your all-inclusive budget and your format preference first. Under about Rs 1.5 Crore, a Sattva Springs villa is out of range and Casagrand Moondance is the realistic option. Above about Rs 2 Crore, with a clear preference for owning an independent villa over a flat, Sattva Springs becomes the natural pick. The narrow overlap - buyers who could fund either - really comes down to apartment-versus-villa lifestyle, commute corridor and how much you value shared amenities against private space.
The honest summary: these two are not substitutes so much as answers to different questions - an affordable branded apartment versus an exclusive villa. Most shortlists will land firmly on one side. If you are weighing Casagrand Moondance against other mid-segment apartment options, talk to our team for a side-by-side on real numbers - and if Sattva Springs is your benchmark, use its own pages to verify every villa figure used here.
Comparing Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu and Sattva Springs? Talk to us.
Our team can share dated cost sheets, current offers and a side-by-side breakdown for both projects so you can decide with real numbers. Most responses arrive within the hour during business hours.
Talk to a Sales ConsultantCasagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu vs Sattva Springs - Frequently Asked Questions
Are Casagrand Moondance and Sattva Springs in the same area?
No. Casagrand Moondance is at Kumbalgodu, off Mysore Road in south-western Bengaluru near the NICE Road interchange. Sattva Springs is on Kanakapura Road at Kagalipura, near the Art of Living campus on the southern corridor. Both tap the wider southern employment belt but from different roads.
What is the main difference between the two projects?
Casagrand Moondance is a 504-home low-rise apartment community offering 2 and 3 BHK flats, while Sattva Springs is a small gated enclave of large 4 BHK row villas. One is an affordable, amenity-rich apartment product; the other is an exclusive, independent villa product.
Which is cheaper, Casagrand Moondance or Sattva Springs?
Casagrand Moondance is significantly cheaper, opening from about Rs 75 Lakhs at a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate. Sattva Springs is a villa product priced from about Rs 2 Crore; it does not publish a fixed per-sqft base rate, so confirm the all-inclusive cost directly with the developer.
How do the configurations and sizes compare?
Casagrand Moondance offers 2 BHK (1,171-1,470 sqft) and 3 BHK (1,641-1,866 sqft) apartments. Sattva Springs is built around 4 BHK row villas of about 3,600-5,236 sqft, with smaller layouts also referenced, so its marquee homes are much larger than Casagrand's flats.
Is one a low-rise apartment and the other a villa project?
Yes. Casagrand Moondance is a low-rise B+G+4 apartment community across 8.6 acres with around 4.5 acres of open space. Sattva Springs is a low-density enclave of roughly seventy triplex 4 BHK villas, each with a basement, living floors and a private terrace.
Are both projects RERA registered?
Yes. Casagrand Moondance is registered under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 and Sattva Springs under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/240724/006948. Verify the current status of both on rera.karnataka.gov.in before booking.