Sumadhura Soukya Road vs Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu
Sumadhura Soukya Road is a pre-launch premium apartment community by Sumadhura Group on Soukya Road, in the Whitefield-Hoskote belt of East Bengaluru - three towers of 3B+G+24 floors each, 523 residences in 2 and 3 BHK, with indicative pricing from Rs 90 Lakh and a sustainability-led specification, ahead of its Karnataka RERA filing. Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu, the sister project this guide weighs it against, sits on the opposite edge of the city: an 8.6-acre low-rise of 504 two- and three-bedroom homes in south-western Kumbalgodu off Mysore Road, live on RERA and ready to transact at Rs 75 Lakhs and a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate. The two genuinely cross-shop, because both pitch sub-crore-to-mid 2 and 3 BHK family homes - yet they serve opposite halves of Bengaluru and sit at opposite ends of the project lifecycle. This guide reads the matchup from the Sumadhura Soukya Road side - what its eastern address, tower format and sustainability stack offer, and where the ready Kumbalgodu product pulls ahead.
At a glance: Sumadhura Soukya Road vs Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu
| Factor | Sumadhura Soukya Road | Casagrand Moondance |
|---|---|---|
| Locality | Soukya Road, Whitefield-Hoskote belt | Kumbalgodu, off Mysore Road |
| Land area | Indicative 6-8 acres (to be confirmed) | 8.6 acres |
| Units | 523 residences | 504 apartments |
| Built form | 3 towers, 3B+G+24 | Low-rise B+G+4 |
| Configurations | 2 & 3 BHK | 2 & 3 BHK |
| Sizes | 1,150 - 1,850 sqft (indicative) | 1,171 - 1,866 sqft |
| Entry price | From Rs 90 Lakh (indicative) | From Rs 75 Lakhs |
| Base rate | Rs 7,000-9,500/sqft (indicative) | Rs 5,399/sqft (offer) |
| Developer | Sumadhura Group | Casagrand |
| RERA | Pre-launch; Karnataka RERA awaited | PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667 |
Location and connectivity: east Whitefield versus south-western Mysore Road
For a Sumadhura Soukya Road buyer the location story is the eastern tech economy. The project sits on Soukya Road, between Kadugodi (Whitefield) and the Hoskote belt in East Bengaluru - the densest software-employment quadrant the city has. Per the project data, Whitefield (Kadugodi) Purple Line metro sits about 4-6 km away, a 12-15 minute off-peak drive, with ITPL, Brigade Tech Gardens and Prestige Shantiniketan SEZ within roughly 7-9 km, and the STRR Hoskote node operational since 2025. For a household whose work and social life are anchored to Whitefield, Marathahalli or the ITPL corridor, that eastern address removes a punishing cross-city commute and puts the dominant employment cluster within a sensible drive.
Casagrand Moondance answers from the opposite edge, in the south-west off Mysore Road (NH-275) near the NICE Road interchange. Its connectivity case rests on the Purple Line metro extension progressing along the Mysore Road corridor and on the NICE Ring Road, which puts Electronic City within roughly 35-40 minutes off-peak. It is the natural pick for households tied to the western and southern employment belts. The decision between the two is therefore geographic rather than qualitative - neither is a walk-to-metro address today, and both lean on a nearby Purple Line node plus arterial road access. The trap this guide exists to help you avoid is crossing the city daily: the road distance between Soukya Road and Kumbalgodu runs across the full diameter of Bengaluru, and no single home realistically serves both an east-side and a west-side workplace comfortably. A practical test before shortlisting either is to drive the route from the project to your office at your actual commute time, not at noon, because peak-hour reality on both corridors is very different from an off-peak estimate. For the south-western distances - the NICE Road reach and the Mysore Road metro extension - verify them at source on Casagrand Moondance's location page.
Configurations and sizing: a genuine like-for-like on 2 and 3 BHK
Unusually for a cross-city comparison, the two projects line up almost exactly on configuration - which is a large part of why a Sumadhura Soukya Road buyer ends up weighing them at all. Both offer only 2 BHK and 3 BHK homes, with no 1 BHK and nothing above a 3 BHK. That shared discipline signals that both developers are designing for the same family stage of first-time buyers and growing households rather than chasing every segment, so the contest comes down to the finer points rather than the broad menu.
The sizes are close enough to be a true like-for-like. Sumadhura Soukya Road's indicative super built-up bands are roughly 1,150-1,300 sqft for the 2 BHK and 1,550-1,850 sqft for the 3 BHK, with final per-config sizing due to publish at Karnataka RERA filing. Casagrand Moondance runs 2 BHK from 1,171 to 1,470 sqft and 3 BHK from 1,641 to 1,866 sqft. Casagrand's 2 BHK ceiling of 1,470 sqft runs a touch larger at the top end, while the 3 BHK bands overlap heavily around 1,850-1,866 sqft. The practical takeaway for a Sumadhura buyer is that you are choosing between two comparably-proportioned family homes, so the deciding factors shift to price per sqft, built form and location rather than raw size. One firm caveat works against Sumadhura on certainty: its dimensions are explicitly indicative and pre-RERA, whereas Casagrand's are from a registered, live project - so treat the Sumadhura bands as a planning estimate until the filing lands. There is also an efficiency point worth checking: a low-rise typically carries leaner common-area loading than 24-floor towers, which can yield a more favourable carpet-to-super-built-up ratio for the same headline size, so compare the actual RERA carpet figures of both before judging value per usable square foot. To see how a focused 2/3 BHK product lays out on plan as a counterpoint, study Casagrand Moondance's floor plans page.
Pricing: an east-Bengaluru pre-launch versus a ready offer rate
On headline numbers the two are close, which is exactly why they end up on the same shortlist - but the certainty behind each number differs, and a Sumadhura Soukya Road buyer should weigh that carefully. Sumadhura's pre-launch tentative pricing starts at Rs 90 Lakh for the 2 BHK and Rs 1.25 Cr for the 3 BHK, with the inventory spanning roughly Rs 90 Lakh to Rs 1.85 Cr and an indicative headline rate of Rs 7,000-9,500 per sqft super built-up. Sumadhura's own data positions this as a 25-35% discount to Godrej Parkshire's Rs 10,830-11,900 per sqft on the same Soukya Road corridor - so within East Bengaluru it is competitively pitched. The qualifier is that a tentative discount is not the same as a booked price.
Casagrand Moondance opens at Rs 75 Lakhs for a 2 BHK at a Rs 5,399 per sqft offer rate, with a Casagrand list rate of Rs 5,599 and a comparable market rate around Rs 7,499. Two things stand out for a Sumadhura buyer comparing the two. First, on a per-square-foot basis Casagrand's Rs 5,399 undercuts Sumadhura's indicative Rs 7,000-9,500 band meaningfully - even against Casagrand's own Rs 7,499 market reference it looks keen. Second, the entry ticket is about Rs 15 Lakh lower at Casagrand, which matters at this budget. The crucial qualifier is the lifecycle: Casagrand's price sits on a registered project you can transact on today, while Sumadhura's figures are pre-launch tentative and lock only at Karnataka RERA filing - a pre-launch price can rise materially between the tentative phase and the registered launch, and pre-launch buyers carry the price-and-approval risk in exchange for early-bird allocation. Always ask each developer for a dated, all-inclusive cost sheet itemising floor-rise, preferred-location, parking and statutory charges, since at this budget those add-ons can swing the effective rate by several hundred rupees per sqft - and at Sumadhura, do not pay any token until the RERA ID is publicly visible on the Karnataka portal. To benchmark against a ready, published rate, check Casagrand Moondance's pricing page.
Built form and density: vertical towers versus a horizontal low-rise
This is where the two diverge most clearly in everyday living. Sumadhura Soukya Road is vertical by design: three towers of three-basement-plus-ground-plus-24-floors each, holding 523 residences. Per its project data, the site planning is mid-density with 60%+ open and landscaped coverage, a central landscape spine, themed pocket gardens and mature canopy planting, plus three basement levels delivering a generous 1.5-2.0 cars per residence. For a Sumadhura buyer the appeal is high-rise living with skyline views, a contemporary tower address and ample basement parking, on a footprint described as an indicative 6-8 acres still to be confirmed at filing.
Casagrand Moondance is horizontal: basement-plus-ground-plus-four-floor wings spread across 8.6 acres, with 504 homes working out to roughly 59 units per acre and 4.5 acres - about 52% of the site - kept as open space around three central courtyards. The experience is garden-dominated, with no tall towers, short lift dependence and children able to step straight onto open ground. Notably, both communities prioritise open green cover at a broadly similar headline percentage - Sumadhura's stated 60%-plus against Casagrand's roughly 52% - so the real differentiator is format rather than greenery alone. A Sumadhura buyer who wants elevated views and a contemporary tower experience leans east; one who dislikes tower living and lift-dependent routines, and who values a confirmed 8.6-acre low-rise spread over an indicative footprint, may find Casagrand the better physical fit. To compare how a low-rise distributes its layout and open space against a three-tower-plus-landscape-spine model, study Casagrand Moondance's master plan page and confirm Sumadhura's footprint once it firms up at filing.
Amenities and lifestyle: a sustainability-led stack versus documented breadth
Both projects are amenity-rich, but they emphasise different things, and a Sumadhura Soukya Road buyer should read the contrast clearly. Sumadhura's headline is a multi-tier clubhouse estimated at 25,000-35,000 sqft with indoor and outdoor pools, a 4,000-5,000 sqft gym, yoga and Pilates studios, squash and indoor sports courts, an amphitheatre and themed pocket gardens. Layered on top is a notably deep green-and-utility stack: a full-occupancy STP with treated-water reuse, rainwater harvesting, 100% common-area LED, solar provisioning, EV charging at basement-1, organic waste composting and an IGBC Gold pre-certification target. For a buyer who values sustainability certification and tower-grade utilities, that explicit eco-credentials package is a genuine draw.
Casagrand Moondance counters with documented breadth: over 69 amenities anchored by a 20,300 sqft clubhouse and a 7,800 sqft swimming pool, plus a deep spread of kids', sports, indoor and outdoor facilities, each figure specified rather than estimated. Because the layout is low-rise, most of this sits at ground level and is easy to reach on foot from any wing. The contrast is one of emphasis and certainty: Casagrand offers more discrete amenities spread over more land in a family-first, easy-access format with committed figures, while Sumadhura pairs a larger headline clubhouse with an explicit sustainability programme - but note that Sumadhura's clubhouse and gym sizes are pre-launch estimates given as ranges, whereas Casagrand's are committed numbers. So the amenity comparison, like the price comparison, partly comes down to estimate-versus-commitment. A practical caveat for any high-rise launch: large headline clubhouse footage is most useful when it opens with the towers rather than in a later phase, so confirm the amenity-delivery schedule against tower handover at Sumadhura. To benchmark against a fully specified set, review Casagrand Moondance's amenities page.
Developer track record: Sumadhura Group versus Casagrand
Both are credible, established names, and for a Sumadhura Soukya Road buyer the Sumadhura record on its home turf is part of the comfort. Per the project data, Sumadhura Group operates as Sumadhura Infracon Pvt. Ltd., founded in 1995 and headquartered in Bengaluru, with 11 million sqft-plus delivered and 7,500-plus homes completed across Bengaluru and Hyderabad. Its Bengaluru portfolio includes Sumadhura Folium, Sumadhura Capitol, Sumadhura Eden Garden and the commercial Sumadhura One, and its data notes a historical Whitefield delivery cadence within a quarter of communicated possession dates - reassuring for a pre-launch buyer betting on an indicative 2030-2031 handover.
Casagrand is the sister developer here. It is Chennai-headquartered 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 the Kumbalgodu project the relevant read is that Casagrand runs a rehearsed operational playbook for 500-unit communities and is delivering against a live RERA registration - so it is a registered, transactable project today, while Sumadhura Soukya Road is pre-launch with Karnataka RERA awaited. The distinction here is project stage rather than reliability: both have real delivery track records, but only one is currently transactable. Whichever you favour, verify the live RERA position - Casagrand Moondance is registered under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667, and for Sumadhura you should wait for its RERA ID to appear publicly before committing - and visit a completed project by each developer before booking. For the sister developer's record, see Casagrand Moondance's about-the-developer page.
Who should pick which
Because the price, configuration and even open-space ratios are broadly comparable, the deciding factor between these two is almost entirely geography and certainty. Choose Sumadhura Soukya Road if your daily orbit is the eastern tech belt - Whitefield, ITPL, Brigade Tech Gardens, Hoskote - if you prefer high-rise tower living with a large clubhouse and an explicit sustainability stack, and if you are comfortable waiting through a pre-launch cycle for a project that prices and registers later, with an indicative 2030-2031 possession. It rewards patience and an east-Bengaluru lifestyle, and it is competitively pitched on its own corridor as a 25-35% discount to Godrej Parkshire - but it carries the normal pre-launch uncertainty on price, RERA and handover.
Choose Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu if your work and life are anchored to the west or south - Mysore Road, the NICE corridor, Electronic City - if you want a low-rise 2 or 3 BHK family home with confirmed open space, and if you value buying into a registered project you can transact on now at a Rs 75 Lakhs entry and a keen Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate. It is the lower-risk, ready-to-book option and the better fit for buyers who want today's certainty over tomorrow's potential.
A clean way to decide is to start from your commute, not the brochure: plot your workplace and the people you see weekly, and pick the side of the city that spares you a cross-town drive, because no amenity package compensates for a two-hour daily commute. Then weigh certainty - if you can wait years and want an eastern tower address, Sumadhura's pre-launch is in play; if you need to move in soon and want a registered project, Casagrand is the realistic answer.
The honest summary: these two genuinely cross-shop on budget and configuration, but they serve opposite halves of Bengaluru and sit at opposite ends of the project lifecycle. If Sumadhura Soukya Road fits your map and you can wait, register your interest with us for the latest pricing and the RERA update - and if Casagrand Moondance is your benchmark, verify each ready, dated figure on its own pages and the Karnataka RERA portal before you commit a rupee.
Comparing Sumadhura Soukya Road and Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu? 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 ConsultantSumadhura Soukya Road vs Casagrand Moondance Kumbalgodu - Frequently Asked Questions
Are Sumadhura Soukya Road and Casagrand Moondance in the same part of Bengaluru?
No - they sit on opposite edges. Sumadhura Soukya Road is in East Bengaluru, on Soukya Road in the Whitefield-Hoskote belt. Casagrand Moondance is in the south-west at Kumbalgodu off Mysore Road, near the NICE Road interchange. The choice is essentially an east-versus-west commute decision.
Which is cheaper, Sumadhura Soukya Road or Casagrand Moondance?
Casagrand Moondance, on both entry ticket and per-sqft rate. It starts from about Rs 75 Lakhs at a Rs 5,399/sqft offer rate. Sumadhura Soukya Road's pre-launch tentative pricing starts from Rs 90 Lakh at an indicative Rs 7,000-9,500/sqft, and those figures lock only at Karnataka RERA filing.
Do the two projects offer similar unit sizes?
Yes - they are close to a like-for-like. Both offer only 2 and 3 BHK. Sumadhura's indicative bands are roughly 1,150-1,300 sqft (2 BHK) and 1,550-1,850 sqft (3 BHK); Casagrand runs 1,171-1,470 sqft (2 BHK) and 1,641-1,866 sqft (3 BHK). Casagrand's figures are registered, Sumadhura's are pre-RERA estimates.
How do the built forms differ?
Sumadhura Soukya Road is vertical - three towers of 3B+G+24 floors, 523 residences, with 60%+ open coverage on an indicative 6-8 acre site. Casagrand Moondance is low-rise B+G+4 across a confirmed 8.6 acres with 504 homes, about 59 units per acre and 4.5 acres of open space around three courtyards.
Which project can I buy and move into sooner?
Casagrand Moondance, which has a live RERA registration and is transactable today. Sumadhura Soukya Road is pre-launch with Karnataka RERA awaited and an indicative 2030-2031 handover window, so it is a longer-dated commitment with the usual pre-launch uncertainties.
Are both projects RERA registered?
Casagrand Moondance is registered under PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/200526/008667. Sumadhura Soukya Road is in pre-launch with its Karnataka RERA registration awaited - do not pay any token until its RERA ID is publicly visible on rera.karnataka.gov.in.