Skip to main content

Projects Overview

A Project is the development container that sits between raw land and sellable units. You allocate stock (land) into a project, then break the project into one or more subprojects (a layout, an apartment block, a cluster of villas), and finally carve those into units. The project is where the money, ownership, and timeline of a development come together.

Projects vs subprojects

It's easy to confuse the two, so here's the distinction:

ProjectSubproject
What it isThe whole development ventureA distinct buildable block within it
HoldsOne or more subprojects, stock allocations, partner holdingsUnits, area breakdown, amenities, SVG layouts
Example"Green Meadows, Phase 1""Green Meadows – Tower A", "Green Meadows – Plotted Layout"
OwnershipPartner holdings at the project levelIts own partner holdings

A project can have several subprojects, each with its own type, area, and units. You'll find subprojects covered in their own Subprojects guide.

What a project holds

  • Code & name — an auto-generated project code (default prefix PRJ-) and a friendly name.
  • Location — the country → state → district → taluk → village hierarchy.
  • Partnership / JV mapping — which partnership or joint venture owns the development.
  • Partner holdings — the ownership split, which must total 100%.
  • Stock allocations — the land assigned to this project.
  • Dates — planned start and completion.
  • Status — where the project is in its lifecycle (below).

The project status lifecycle

A project moves through six statuses from initial idea to completion:

StatusMeaning
DraftBeing set up. Not yet a committed development.
PlanningApproved to plan — layouts, subprojects, and stock are being arranged.
ActiveUnder active development and/or open for sales.
On HoldTemporarily paused (funding, legal, weather, a decision pending).
CompletedDevelopment and sales are finished.
CancelledAbandoned.

On Hold is a pause that returns to Active. Completed and Cancelled are end states. For the authoritative cross-product view, see Status lifecycles.

What you can do with a project

ActionPage
Create a new developmentCreate a project
Edit details, change status, map stock, deleteManage a project
Add buildable blocksCreate a subproject

Who can manage projects

Project actions are permission-controlled — viewing, creating, editing, changing status, and managing stock mappings each require the relevant permission. Some org roles (such as Project Manager) are scoped to specific projects. See Roles overview.

Next steps