Walking Above the City: How the Skywalk at KDMS Changes How Residents Move?

  • 29th June 2026 |

    3 min read

Most residential projects are built for the apartment. The corridors connect floors. The lobby connects towers. The design logic is vertical, and the spaces in between are functional at best.

KDMS Skywalk was built with a different intention. The project takes its name from an actual skywalk: an elevated walkway connecting its two towers, Nova and Vega, above the ground. It’s not a bridge between buildings. It’s a place in itself.

That distinction matters for how residents experience daily movement. A walk that takes you through open air, above the compound, with a view of the city and green on both sides, is not the same as a walk down a corridor. One is transit. The other is time you’d actually choose.

The skywalk sits within a project that has thought carefully about movement at every level. At the ground floor, a stroll path winds through the front garden, past shaded seating, the open gym, and the children’s play area. The path is flat, maintained, and designed for the kind of unhurried walking that doesn’t require motivation or a destination. A grandmother can use it. So can a five-year-old.

For residents who want structured fitness, the options are thorough: a gymnasium, a swimming pool, a Zumba and Pilates studio, a yoga space, and a Meditation Deck on the Nova terrace surrounded by landscaped greens. These aren’t clustered into one wing. They’re distributed across the ground floor clubhouse, which spans 32,000 sq ft and sits at the base of the project, accessible without a lift.

The Spa, Steam Room, and Sauna round out the recovery side. Most projects offer one of these, if any. Skywalk has all three.

What connects all of this is access. The facilities exist. They’re close. They’re easy to reach. And for a wellness habit to actually hold, proximity matters more than almost anything else. The person who has to drive somewhere to work out will eventually stop going. The person who walks downstairs rarely has that excuse.

At KDMS Skywalk, wellness isn’t a selling point. It’s a layout decision. One that shows up every morning when a resident steps outside and finds something worth doing, right there, before the day properly begins.