whitefield
For Sale, Villas
₹2.6 Cr
Property ID :
RH-23326-property
The villas’s is one of the most eco-friendly projects located in the heart of Whitefield. This BDA Approved project boasts crystal clear titles (‘A’ Khata) and is ideally located amidst nature but also few minutes away from Metro station (2km), Malls (3km), Tech Parks (3km), Hospitals(3km), Schools (1km), Gyms (1km), Cafes and Restaurants (2km). Jatti Dwarakamai is spread over an area of about 2 acres and houses 25 homes (4BHK). What is more heartening to the resident is that the built up area in the entire campus is less than 50% of the total. The rest is pure nature.
Whitefield is a neighbourhood of Bangalore in the state of Karnataka, India. Established in the late 1800s as a settlement for the Eurasians and Anglo Indians of Bangalore, Whitefield remained a quaint little settlement at the eastern periphery of Bangalore city till the late 1990s when the local IT boom turned it into a major suburb. It is now a major part of Greater Bangalore.[1][2]
The locality is named after D. S. White, founder of the European and Anglo Indian Association which received 4,000 acres of land from Mysore Maharaja Chamaraja Wodeyar in the 19th century
In 1882, King Chamaraja Wodeyar IX, the Maharaja of the Mysore State, granted 3,900 acres (16 km2) of land to the Eurasian and Anglo-Indian Association for the establishment of agricultural settlements at Whitefield, which lay within his territory. The association was then about 170 strong with a committee of 30 members. They were part of the formation of the only settlement in India that Europeans and Eurasians could call their own. Mr. White, the then president of the E&AI Association., took a lively interest in it and helped in its advancement which at the beginning was an uphill task.
In the first decade of the 1900s, there were about 45 houses: 18 were on the village site and the remainder were on farms throughout the settlement and contained about 2,000 acres (8.1 km2) of land fit for cultivation. The number of residents in 1907 was 130. Lord Connemara, the then governor of Madras (1890) and General Sir Harry Prendergast, a British resident in Mysore, visited the settlement and lent support to the development of Whitefield. Subsequently, there were regular visits to Whitefield by the Bangalore District officials and high dignitaries from the Madras Presidency