Prestige Shantiniketan in Whitefield needs a planned apartment-safety layout because the township has many high-rise balconies, utility ducts, AC ledges, and repeat tower faces. EverSafe measures the full flat and keeps balcony nets, pigeon nets, child safety coverage, invisible grills, and window nets neat enough for a shared elevation.
For Prestige Shantiniketan, window safety nets should cover bedroom, kitchen, utility, and service windows while keeping ventilation and cleaning access practical.

Whitefield high-rise exposure
Measured fit
Utility ducts and AC ledges
Measured fit
Clean township elevation
Measured fit
Internal routes
The best result here comes from measuring every opening together instead of treating balcony, window, and duct areas as separate patch jobs. Straight fixing lines, stable corner returns, and UV-stable material help the installation stay tight in Whitefield wind while keeping the balcony usable.
The township has many repeated windows and duct-side openings, but frame depth and grille position vary, so window work should be measured separately from balcony work.
Best fit when the risk is at windows, utility gaps, or service openings rather than the main balcony edge.
Measure balcony width, railing depth, window openings, ducts, and AC ledges in one visit.
Choose net, invisible grill cable, or mixed coverage based on safety, bird control, and view needs.
Install with even anchor spacing and tight corner returns across visible tower faces.
Check mesh tension, window movement, cleaning access, and resident comfort before handover.
Quote checklist
Yes. Mesh colour, fixing line, and corner returns are planned so the work looks tidy from outside.
Yes. Both can be measured together, with separate scope notes when ledges or ducts need different treatment.
Yes. Close mesh coverage can protect balcony gaps and windows while keeping daily balcony use practical.
They protect the smaller openings that balcony nets do not cover, especially bedroom and utility-side windows.