Alembic Cloud Forest Floor Plan

Designed Around Daily Routines, Not Just Square Feet

The floor plans are sensible, functional, and well-proportioned, something families appreciate only after they move in. Across configurations, you’ll notice:

  • Minimal wasted corridor space
  • Well-sized living and dining areas
  • Bedrooms that feel private and practical
  • Balconies that can actually be used daily

These homes are designed for real furniture, real storage needs, and real family movement, not just brochure diagrams.

Whether it’s working from home, children studying, or hosting guests. , the layouts adapt easily without feeling cramped.

Alembic Cloud Forest Floor Plans: A Plain-Language Breakdown

Most floor plan and master plan pages on real estate websites are useless. They show you a diagram, list a carpet area number, and leave you to figure out what it actually means to live there. This post does something different. It walks through each configuration at Alembic Cloud Forest, tells you what the numbers mean in practice, and helps you decide which unit type makes sense for your life.

All area figures below come directly from the RERA-filed floor plans.

Understanding the Numbers First

Before looking at any specific unit, you need to understand three area definitions that Indian real estate uses. They are not interchangeable and they matter.

Carpet Area (as per RERA): The actual usable floor space inside your apartment, measured wall to wall. This is the number that tells you how much space you actually live in. RERA mandates this number be disclosed accurately.

Carpet Area (as per Actual): This is slightly larger than the RERA carpet area because it includes wall thickness. The difference is usually 7 to 10 percent.

Super Built-Up Area (SBA): This is what you pay for. It includes your carpet area, the walls, your share of common areas like lifts, staircases, lobbies, and corridors. At Alembic Cloud Forest, the loading factor is approximately 47 to 48 percent. That means for every 100 sq. ft. of carpet area you actually use, you are paying for roughly 147 to 148 sq. ft.

This is not unique to Alembic. It is standard practice across Bangalore. But you should understand it before evaluating value.

2 BHK: 842 sq. ft. Carpet Area

Area Type sq. mt. sq. ft.
Carpet Area (as per RERA)122.651,320
Balcony Area9.35101
Utility Area4.6550
Carpet Area (as per Actual)132.631,428

The standard 2 BHK at Cloud Forest is a genuinely well-proportioned apartment for its size.

The living room is 3.35 x 5.0 metres, which works out to about 11 x 16.5 feet. That is large enough for a full L-shaped sofa, a coffee table, and a TV unit without the room feeling cramped. Many 2 BHK apartments in Bangalore at this price point give you a living space that is 10 x 12 feet. The difference is noticeable every day.

The dining area is separate from the living room at 3.0 x 3.66 metres, which seats six people comfortably. The kitchen is 2.45 x 3.20 metres with a separate utility area behind it, which means cooking mess and washing are kept away from the main kitchen counter.

The master bedroom at 3.50 x 3.95 metres fits a king-size bed with space on three sides. Bedroom 2 is 3.33 x 3.65 metres, which fits a queen-size bed and a wardrobe without squeezing.

Both bedrooms have attached bathrooms. Toilet T1 serves the master bedroom. Toilet T2 is accessible from the passage, making it functional as a common bathroom for guests without routing them through a bedroom.

The balcony at 54 sq. ft. is a real balcony. You can put two chairs and a small table on it. It opens from the living area, which is the right placement.

Who this suits: Young couples, small families with one child, or single professionals who want space without overbuying. The layout wastes nothing.

2 BHK Large: 898 sq. ft. Carpet Area

Area Type sq. mt. sq. ft.
Carpet Area (as per RERA)83.40898
Balcony Area3.9643
Utility Area4.4748
Carpet Area (as per Actual)89.65965

The Large variant gains about 56 sq. ft. of carpet area over the standard 2 BHK. The extra space shows up primarily in the living and dining area, which is now 5.30 x 6.40 metres, or roughly 17.5 x 21 feet. That is a large room. It can comfortably seat eight at a dining table and still have a full living setup on the other end.

The master bedroom grows to 3.50 x 4.45 metres, giving proper space for a king bed plus a side table on each side plus a dedicated zone for a wardrobe or dresser. Bedroom 2 remains the same size as in the standard 2 BHK.

The tradeoff is the balcony. At 43 sq. ft., it is actually smaller than the standard variant's 54 sq. ft. The floor plan places the balcony off the living area, which is correct, but if you want to use it as an outdoor space rather than just a ventilation ledge, the standard 2 BHK actually gives you more room there.

The kitchen is larger at 3.69 x 2.52 metres, with a utility area behind it. The layout is similar to the standard unit but more generous throughout.

Who this suits: Couples who entertain frequently and want a living-dining room that does not feel like it doubles as a corridor. Also good for work-from-home setups where you need a dedicated desk area within the main living space.

3 BHK: 1,095 sq. ft. Carpet Area

Area Type sq. mt. sq. ft.
Carpet Area (as per RERA)101.691,095
Balcony Area8.1187
Utility Area4.4748
Carpet Area (as per Actual)111.351,199

This is where the floor plan design gets notably better. The 3 BHK at Cloud Forest has three things that distinguish it from most 3 BHK apartments in this price range.

First, the living and dining area is 5.50 x 6.40 metres, or about 18 x 21 feet. That is a genuinely large room. It does not feel like the builder squeezed a third bedroom into a 2 BHK shell.

Second, there are two balconies. A small one at 7.7 x 4.1 feet off the master bedroom side, and a larger one at 11.6 x 5 feet off the living area. Together they give 87 sq. ft. of outdoor space. In a high-rise apartment, this is meaningful. Morning coffee, evening reading, plants, or just air. Two balconies also mean two sides of the apartment have ventilation.

Third, all three bedrooms are genuinely separate. The master bedroom at 3.50 x 4.65 metres and Bedroom 3 at 3.33 x 3.95 metres are both large enough for king-size beds. Bedroom 2 at 3.35 x 3.65 metres fits a queen comfortably. There is no bedroom in this plan that functions as a glorified storage room.

Each bedroom has an attached bathroom. The passage is 1.10 metres wide, which means three people can pass each other without turning sideways. It is a small detail that makes daily life in a family apartment noticeably smoother.

Who this suits: Families with two children, couples who need a dedicated home office, or anyone buying for long-term self-use who wants space that ages well as needs change.

3 BHK Large: 1,197 sq. ft. Carpet Area

Area Type sq. mt. sq. ft.
Carpet Area (as per RERA)111.211,197
Balcony Area8.5292
Utility Area4.6550
Carpet Area (as per Actual)121.011,303

The Large variant adds approximately 100 sq. ft. of carpet area over the standard 3 BHK. The differences are spread evenly rather than concentrated in one room, which is the right approach.

The living and dining stays at a similar 5.45 x 6.40 metres. The master bedroom grows to 3.65 x 4.90 metres, which is now comfortably in the range where a king bed, two side tables, a dresser, and a wardrobe can all exist without compromise. Bedroom 3 also grows meaningfully to 3.33 x 4.15 metres.

The kitchen at 3.84 x 2.60 metres is larger and practical. The utility area behind it is the same size as the standard 3 BHK.

There are again two balconies. The larger one at 12 x 5 feet and a smaller one at 8.1 x 4.1 feet.

The foyer at 3.26 x 1.94 metres is larger than in the standard 3 BHK. In Indian apartments, the foyer is often treated as wasted space. Here it is large enough to function as a proper entry zone with a shoe rack, coat hooks, and a mirror without feeling like a bottleneck.

Who this suits: Families who want the same 3-bedroom layout but with more breathing room in the bedrooms. Also a better option if you plan to host extended family regularly, because the larger master bedroom can double as a guest room without the awkwardness of a tight space.

3.5 BHK: 1,320 sq. ft. Carpet Area

Area Type sq. mt. sq. ft.
Carpet Area (as per RERA)122.651,320
Balcony Area9.35101
Utility Area4.6550
Carpet Area (as per Actual)132.631,428

The 3.5 BHK is the most interesting configuration in the project. The half BHK is a dedicated Home Office room at 3.25 x 2.60 metres, approximately 10.8 x 8.6 feet. There is also a separate fourth toilet just for the home office zone. This means the home office can function as a genuinely private, door-closed, closed-bathroom workspace without any crossover with the bedroom areas of the apartment.

For anyone who works from home seriously, this is not a luxury. A dedicated work room with its own bathroom is the difference between a professional setup and working at the kitchen table.

The main bedrooms are all well-sized. Master bedroom at 4.20 x 4.45 metres with a walk-in wardrobe. Bedroom 2 at 3.35 x 3.65 metres. Bedroom 3 at 3.70 x 3.65 metres.

The living and dining at 5.45 x 6.40 metres is the same generous size as the 3 BHK variants.

There are two balconies totalling 101 sq. ft., the highest balcony area across all configurations. One is 8.4 x 5 feet off the master bedroom zone, and one is 12 x 5 feet off the living area.

The master bedroom also has a dedicated walk-in wardrobe room at 8 x 8.7 feet. This is separate from the main bedroom space, which means the bedroom itself is not dominated by built-in wardrobes and has genuine open floor area.

Who this suits: Remote workers, professionals who need a home office that separates work life from home life, or families where one parent works from home and needs a space that can be closed off during the day.

Choosing Between Configurations

Configuration RERA Carpet (sq. ft.) Balcony (sq. ft.) Utility (sq. ft.) Actual Carpet (sq. ft.)
2 BHK8425440907
2 BHK Large8984348965
3 BHK1,09587481,199
3 BHK Large1,19792501,303
3.5 BHK1,320101501,428

If you are buying for end-use, the decision usually comes down to two things: how many people will actually live there, and how you work.

For one or two people, the standard 2 BHK or 2 BHK Large is efficient and well-laid-out. You will not feel cramped. The living spaces are larger than what most competing projects offer at similar square footage.

For a family with children, the 3 BHK is the natural fit. Both variants are good. The Large variant is worth the premium if the children are different ages and need their own genuinely separate rooms rather than rooms that share a wall and feel adjacent.

If you work from home and have the budget the 3.5 BHK is suits you. The dedicated home office with its own bathroom is something you will use every day for years. It is not about status. It is about the practical reality of working in a space that is separated from where you sleep.

The floor plans across all configurations share one consistent quality: no room feels like it was created to hit a bedroom count rather than to be lived in. That is harder to achieve than it sounds.

alembic cloud forest pathway

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