
Four towers. Seventy percent open ground. No compromise.
Godrej South Estate is low-density as a principle — 402 residences across 5.25 acres of South Delhi, designed by Perkins Eastman with stone and silence as the brief.


Space measured in acres, not amenity lists
Seventy percent of the site remains open: planted ground, water, and breathing room. Zero vehicle movement on the ground floor is not a feature — it is the floor plan of the land itself.
402 residences. 4 towers. 5.25 acres. Mivan construction throughout — no brick, no compromise in the structure behind the stone.


An inheritance drawn from Mughal courts and Rashtrapati Bhawan
The stone cladding borrows its reference from Rashtrapati Bhawan — ceremonial, not decorative. The jali screens draw directly from Mughal court architecture, reinterpreted in Mivan-built towers by Perkins Eastman.
This is architectural inheritance treated as structural argument: material honesty, shadow and texture, forms that read from fifty metres and reward you at five centimetres.
Capital-grade execution. Air you can measure. A ground plane built for living.
Godrej Properties has built India across three generations. South Estate is the address where that track record meets an architectural brief that refuses to settle for density as the default.
