Where Old Houses & New Flats Sit Side by Side
Kaggadasapura Is Bangalore's Original Mixed‑Use Neighbourhood — and Our Housekeepers Navigate Its Rhythms Like Locals
Kaggadasapura straddles the line between the old and the new. You'll see a grandmother stringing flowers on the veranda of a house built in the 1980s, while next door a software engineer locks his Pulsar and heads to Bagmane Tech Park. The streets are narrow, but the community is wide‑open: neighbours know each other's milkman and the exact timing of the BWSSB water valve. Homes here come in three varieties — the classic independent ground‑floor house with a tulsi katte, the 2BHK flat in a 8‑unit building, and the occasional newly built apartment complex with a lift that works most of the time. A Kaggadasapura housekeeper must be versatile. She needs to adapt to a small kitchen where the counter space is the size of a laptop, to bathrooms that have no exhaust fan, and to clotheslines that hang over a narrow lane. Our housekeepers are trained specifically for these conditions: they use a small‑head mop that can reach under low cots, they clean windows without splashing water on the neighbour's wall, and they wash vessels in a way that conserves water because they know the sump may run dry. Every single one has been verified through the local police station and has reference letters from families within the C.V. Raman Nagar ward — in Kaggadasapura, trust travels by word of mouth, and we honour that.
We also understand that many Kaggadasapura homes have senior citizens who are at home all day. Our housekeepers are briefed to be quiet and respectful, to help with small errands like fetching a gas cylinder delivery, and to maintain a cleaning schedule that doesn't disturb the afternoon nap. The result is a housekeeper who becomes not just a worker but a familiar, trusted face in the lane.
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