Amenities

Sattva Songbird Phase 2 Amenities

Phase 2 bundles sports courts, multiple clubhouses, landscaped open space, and baseline security infrastructure into a highway-facing high-rise. Read this as a lifestyle spec sheet—then pressure-test what is contractually committed versus mood-board fantasy.

Amenities Overview

What the amenity mix says about daily life here.

Songbird’s pitch leans on movement and community: pools, gyms, multipurpose halls, and outdoor courts sit alongside senior sit-outs and children’s zones—exactly the mix young families expect in a ₹1.6–1.9 crore corridor. The real question is operations: hours, staffing, and maintenance once 381 homes arrive.

Seventeen named items currently surface in published amenity lists, spanning wellness, leisure, social space, and engineering comforts such as backup power, CCTV, and rainwater harvesting. Cross-link costs in pricing with the club programme so you know what your maintenance cheque actually buys.

Amenity Categories

Grouped for easier comparison.

The clusters below summarise marketing lists. Translate each bullet into a maintenance cost, a noise profile, and a realistic usage hour before you mentally move in.

Wellness & Fitness

  • Swimming pool
  • Fully equipped gymnasium
  • 3 clubhouses
  • Children's play area
  • Jogging track

Family & Leisure

  • Landscaped gardens
  • Indoor games room
  • Multipurpose hall
  • Badminton court
  • Basketball court

Social Spaces

  • Senior citizen sit-outs
  • 100% power backup
  • Covered car parking
  • 24/7 CCTV security
  • Intercom

Infrastructure & Comfort

  • Rainwater harvesting
  • Sewage treatment plant
Daily rhythm

What residents actually do with these spaces Monday to Monday.

Morning hours belong to joggers, swimmers doing laps, and domestic staff walking pets along peripheral paths. Late afternoons see children’s classes spill into multipurpose rooms while working parents queue at the gym. Weekends stress-test parking near club drop-offs and noise from basketball pick-up games. If the sales story cannot describe that hourly choreography, you are looking at a brochure list—not a living community.

High-rise towers amplify sound vertically; a rooftop party may feel fine on 38 but annoys 28 unless slabs and isolation joints were engineered for it. Ask whether society bylaws will cap decibel levels after 10 p.m. and how security enforces them without neighbour wars.

Wellness depth

Beyond treadmills: physiotherapy, coaching, and air quality.

A “fully equipped gym” can mean twelve cardio machines or a three-zone strength floor. Request equipment brand lists, warranty terms, and whether the developer donates starter packs or leaves society to negotiate leases. If yoga or spin studios are promised, confirm ceiling heights and HVAC tonnage—glass boxes without fresh air fail quickly.

Indoor air matters for asthmatic children: check if club HVAC uses high-grade filters and whether outdoor courts sit upwind of generator exhaust. These details rarely appear in amenity tables but show up in parents’ WhatsApp groups after possession.

Landscape promise

How the 80% open-space headline should feel on foot.

Open space is not only lawn area—it includes courts, drive aisles, and service strips. Walk the sales mock-up with a critical eye: can two strollers pass on primary paths? Are seatings shaded? Does storm-water ponding have visible falls? Mature trees take years; if the brochure shows full canopies, ask whether large caliper trees are contract-specified or aspirational.

Senior sit-outs should sit near lifts and toilets, not at remote podium corners. Intergenerational design is a marketing phrase only when distances, seating ergonomics, and lighting levels prove it.

Commercial edges

If retail or third-party spaces touch the amenity ring.

Sometimes convenience retail or café leases hug club buildings. That can be lovely—or it can mean exhaust ducts pointed toward pools. Ask for lease guidelines on music, delivery bikes, and grease traps. Security should explain how vendor staff badge in without compromising resident-only zones.

Visitor parking overlap is another friction point: club guests, retail patrons, and open-house brokers sharing the same aisle creates honking loops you will hear from mid-tower bedrooms.

Club & pool

How triple-club programming behaves at full occupancy.

Three clubhouses—one primary and two satellites—can spread crowding or duplicate costs. Ask which pool is Olympic-length versus toddler splash, whether gyms duplicate equipment brands, and how lifeguard hours stretch on weekdays. Humidity from indoor pools travels through lobbies if MEP design is weak; sniff the air on mock visits to older Sattva projects if you can.

Multipurpose halls win on weddings and society AGMs but lose if acoustic isolation is poor. Request decibel readings or at least wall assembly specs between the hall and adjacent towers.

Co-working corners sometimes appear as future fit-outs; confirm whether fibre backbone and UPS-backed outlets are already ducted or merely “possible later.”

Outdoor sports

Badminton, basketball, and the jogging loop in real life.

Courts are useless if floodlights lack shields for bedroom stacks or if surface drainage fails during Bengaluru’s burst rains. Jogging tracks need gentle curves—knee injuries spike on tight-radius podium loops. Children’s play zones should sit away from vehicular ramps; rubberised flooring ages fast under UV—ask about replacement cycles.

If you want a mid-rise community with explicit sports-and-family positioning in another belt, contrast with Habulus Tranquil in Electronic City—different density, useful sanity check on how much open area per apartment feels adequate.

Security & utilities

Backup power, CCTV, and the boring stuff that fails first.

“100% backup” rarely means every socket—it usually covers lifts, common lighting, and pumps. Clarify what runs in your apartment during outages: one light-fan point, full home, or nothing until society genset upgrades. CCTV coverage should include parking aisles and child play sightlines, not only gates.

Rainwater harvesting and STP sound virtuous; verify capacities against Phase 2 population and whether treated water actually irrigates landscape or merely checks a compliance box.

Lifestyle fit

Who actually enjoys this amenity bundle.

Active families who want courts and pools on-site, elders who need shaded sit-outs close to lifts, and professionals who value a credible gym save expensive club memberships elsewhere. If you rarely use shared facilities, you still pay for them via maintenance—decide honestly whether the bundle is worth your ticket.

Link amenities back to the master plan: a beautiful club pinned under a bedroom stack plays differently than one offset across landscape.

Benchmark

How ultra-tall towers elsewhere stage amenities.

Sky lounges and elevated decks shift structural cores; when researching other cities for ideas, look at Hallmark Altus—then ask Songbird’s structural team how similar features, if promised later, would load the columns you are buying beside.

For Bangalore north luxury with a different amenity tone, skim Purva Hennur and note how single-tower projects concentrate spend differently from twin-tower campuses.

Handover reality

What “ready” means before society takes charge.

Amenities are construction projects inside the larger tower project. Pools need curing time, gym floors need calibration, and multipurpose halls need fire NOCs for assembly loads. Ask for a phased handover calendar: which pieces open at OC, which trail by months, and how maintenance fees are discounted until the full bundle is live.

Early residents often subsidise half-finished clubs through full maintenance—negotiate credits or phased fee ramps if marketing promised a simultaneous launch. Get those commitments as annexures, not email screenshots.

Tie your amenity expectations back to unit choice in floor plans: a bedroom facing the pool may love the view today and hate chlorine evenings tomorrow.

Heat and noise stack differently in 40+ storey blocks: plant decks, generator yards, and service lifts can dominate pockets of the podium even when marketing renders look uniformly green. Ask for an acoustic study summary or at least the planned locations of major MEP yards, then walk the master plan with those pins in mind before you fall for a corner unit discount.

Next Step

Need the amenity sheet or a callback to discuss community fit?

Use the enquiry page to request project documents, pricing help, or a callback from the project desk.