Financial District
Jun 18, 2026
The premium pricing of My Home Vyoma in Hyderabad's Financial District isn't marketing fluff; it's driven by the concrete math of lower building density. By providing rare ground-level breathing room and higher ceilings, these structural upgrades require a Rs. 1,280+ per sq.ft. premium over standard local high-rises.
1. The Low-Density Premium (Or, What "Open Space" Actually Costs)
Let’s start with the land. Land in the Financial District is insanely expensive—say a conservative Rs. 50 Crores per acrewhen My Home acquired this 22.34-acre plot. That puts the total land value at a staggering Rs. 1,117 Crores.
How a builder recovers that massive upfront cost depends entirely on how many flats they cram onto the property.
The Standard Blueprint (The Crowded Way)
To maximize every inch and lower the price per square foot, a typical builder will pack about 150 units into an acre. Across 22.34 acres, that’s roughly 3,351 flats. Spread the land cost across all that sellable space (assuming a 3,400 sq.ft. average size), and the land only costs the developer about Rs. 980 per sq.ft.
The Vyoma Blueprint (The Low-Density Way)
My Home didn't do that. They decided to build just 2,260 apartments across 12 towers. That drops the density down to a much more breathable 101 units per acre. But because they are selling roughly 1,000 fewer apartments, that same Rs. 1,117 Crore land cost gets divided among fewer buyers. The land cost instantly jumps to Rs. 1,454 per sq.ft.
The Takeaway:
Just by choosing not to crowd the plot, My Home is forced to pass an extra Rs. 474 per sq.ft. in raw land costs directly to the buyer. You are quite literally paying for the luxury of empty space around your tower.
2. The Taller Ceilings Premium (Paying for Volume, Not Just Square Footage)
Vyoma isn't just spacious when you look out the window; it’s spacious when you look up.
A standard apartment usually gives you a 10-foot floor-to-floor height. Vyoma, however, goes big. Eleven of their towers feature 11.3-foot heights, and the premium tower pushes it to 11.8 feet. On average, you are getting about 13.5% more physical volume inside your home.
But here is the catch
Building a 51-story tower with extra-tall ceilings is a logistical and engineering headache. It means pouring significantly more concrete, tying more steel, and doing extra structural engineering so a taller, heavier building doesn't sway in the wind.If a standard luxury high-rise costs about Rs. 3,800 per sq.ft. just to build, adding 13.5% more volume pushes the basic construction cost up by roughly Rs. 513 per sq.ft.
The Reality Check
What This Means for the Final Price
When you stack these two design choices together, the raw, out-of-pocket extra costs for the developer look like this:
Extra Land Cost (fewer neighbors): Rs. 474 / sq.ft.
Extra Building Cost (taller ceilings): Rs. 513 / sq.ft.
Total Extra Base Cost: Rs. 987 / sq.ft.
But remember, this is just the raw cost to build. Developers don't sell at cost.
When you factor in the interest on their loans over a long 5-year build time (with a RERA timeline stretching to 2031) plus a standard 25% to 30% business profit margin, that raw Rs. 987 cost balloons significantly.
The Bottom Line
When you do the math, Vyoma's specific design requires an expected increase of Rs. 1,280+ per sq.ft. in the final selling price compared to a standard, crowded project built next door.
So if you're looking at Vyoma and wondering why the pricing feels heavy, it's not just a premium label. You are quite literally paying for the luxury of extra breathing room on the ground, and the extra air above your head.